Projectile Motion in an Electric Field

AI Thread Summary
The discussion focuses on solving a projectile motion problem involving electrons in an electric field. The first part examines whether an electron, shot at a 45-degree angle with an initial velocity of 9.07E6 m/s, will strike one of the charged plates. Calculations reveal that the electron does hit the plate, and the horizontal distance is approximately 0.017 m, although this was initially marked incorrect. The second part involves a second electron with a lower initial velocity of 7.28E6 m/s, which does not strike the plates, and the vertical position at which it exits the field is calculated to be approximately 0.0135 m. The discussion emphasizes the importance of correctly applying kinematic equations and understanding the effects of electric forces on the electron's motion.
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Homework Statement


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In the figure, a uniform, upward-pointing electric field E of magnitude 5.00E3 N/C has been set up between two horizontal plates by charging the lower plate positively and the upper plate negatively. The plates have length L = 4 cm (0.04 m) and separation d = 2.00 cm (0.02 m). An electron is then shot between the plates from the left edge of the lower plate. The initial velocity v0 of the electron makes an angle θ=45° with the lower plate and has a magnitude of 9.07E6 m/s.

a) Will the electron strike one of the plates? If so, what is the horizontal distance from the left edge? If not enter the vertical position at which the particle leaves the space between the plates ( m).

b) The next electron has an initial velocity which has the same angle θ=45° with the lower plate and has a magnitude of 7.28×106 m/s. Will this electron strike one of the plates? If so, what is the horizontal distance from the left edge? If not enter the vertical position at which the particle leaves the space between the plates ( m).

Homework Equations


qE=ma
v[initial, y]^2 + (2*a*deltaY) = 0
acceleration = [qE]/[m]
v[initial,y] + (a*t) = 0

The Attempt at a Solution


find the acceleration
qE=ma (mass and q are actually constant numbers of 9.11E-31 and 1.6E-19 respectively)
(1.6E-19)(5.00E3 N/C)=(9.11E-31)a
a=8.78E14

then you find the velocity components which is vo(sin theta)
(9.07E6 m/s)sin(45°)=6.41E6

solve for time for X and Y
Tx being: L= (velocity from above)(Tx)
(0.04 m)=(6.41E6)Tx
Tx=6.24E-9

Ty being: d= (.5(acceleration))Ty^2 + (velocity found above)Ty
0.02 m=((0.5)(8.78E14))Ty^2 + (6.41E6)Ty
(4.39E14)Ty^2 + (6.41E6)Ty - 0.02 = 0
Ty=2.64E-9
or
Ty=-1.72E-8

whichever time is smaller, you solve for the height using time*acceleration

**This question has been eluding me for a while, and that's probably because I can't wrap my head around the question. The attempt I have up there was given to me by one of my classmates and I've attempted to follow along as you can see, but I don't understand it. Is the attempt, in your opinion, good? Did I do those parts correctly? What does it even mean? Tx and Ty? Please, help me.
 
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I found a comment going through this problem. I've posted that entire comment, editing my data into it and doing the calculations. It didn't work. Please help me figure out where I went wrong.

Attempt 2:
To determine whether or not the electron strikes one of the plates, we need to determine the time Ty required to travel a vertical distance of y = 0.02 m and the time Tx for a horizontal distance of x = 0.04 m.

If Ty < Tx, then the electron will strike the negative plate.
If Ty > Tx, the electron will not strike the plate and we will then determine the vertical distance at which the particle leaves the space between the plates.

For the most part, this is a kinematics problem, but we need to evaluate the vertical acceleration induced on the electron as it travels through the plates.

This acceleration is found by equating F = qE = ma --> a = qE/m
a = qE/m
a=(1.6E-19)(5E3) / (9.11E-31)
a=8.78E14 m/s^2

We also need to isolate the x and y components of the velocity v0.

Vy = v0sin(45) =(9.07E6)(sin45)= 6.41E6 m/s
Vx = Vy = 6.41E6 m/s

Now we find Ty and Tx.

0.02 = 0+(6.41E6)(Ty)+(0.5)(8.78E14)(Ty)^2 --> Ty = 2.64e-9 s
0.04 = 0+(6.41E6)(Tx) --> Tx = 6.24e-9 s

Since Ty < Tx, the electron will in fact strike the plate at a horizontal distance of x = 0+(6.41e6)(2.64e-9) = 0.017 m.
**I entered 0.017 m into the online homework and it said it was not correct. What did I miss?**

Part 2

We repeat the process and find that that Ty < Tx. The electron strikes the plate at a horizontal distance of x = 0+(3.65e6)(4.08e-9) = 0.015 m.
**This is the data from the person who commented this to another person. I stopped following through after getting the first part wrong, but I'm including this just in case it's kind of right**
 
rlc said:
solve for the height using time*acceleration
Umm... no.

The first stage was right, finding the time to traverse in the x direction. But the questions asks for the y value on exit, so it is more obvious to plug the time for the traversal into the vertical motion equations to find y. If the answer is negative then it hits the lower plate.
But there is another question that needs to be answered: does it hit the upper plate?
 
Since Ty < Tx, the electron will strike the plate...right?
 
rlc said:
the time Ty required to travel a vertical distance of y = 0.02
But bear in mind it might never reach that height.
rlc said:
0.02 = 0+(6.41E6)(Ty)+(0.5)(8.78E14)(Ty)^2
Careful with signs! Which is the positive vertical direction?
 
Isn't Ty the positive vertical direction?
 
rlc said:
Isn't Ty the positive vertical direction?
What are the correct signs for the initial vertical velocity and the vertical acceleration?
 
Are they both negative?
 
rlc said:
Are they both negative?
Up in the diagram is positive, yes?
Is the initial vertical velocity up or down?
Is the acceleration up or down?
 
  • #10
The initial vertical velocity is up and to the right. Acceleration...that would be affected by the charges, right? The upper plate is negatively charged while the lower plate is positively charged. An electron is negatively charged.
 
  • #11
rlc said:
The initial vertical velocity is up and to the right. Acceleration...that would be affected by the charges, right? The upper plate is negatively charged while the lower plate is positively charged. An electron is negatively charged.
Right, so which way is the acceleration?
 
  • #12
Upward as well? Would it be attracted to the negative charge?
Or is it the exact opposite?
 
  • #13
Oh wait, it'd be attracted to the positive charge, right?
 
  • #14
rlc said:
Upward as well? Would it be attracted to the negative charge?
Or is it the exact opposite?
Do like charges attract or repel?
 
  • #15
Like charges repel
 
  • #16
rlc said:
Oh wait, it'd be attracted to the positive charge, right?
Yes.
So what is the sign on the acceleration?
 
  • #17
Negative.
Would that affect this equation in this way?:
0.02 = 0+(6.41E6)(Ty) - (0.5)(8.78E14)(Ty)^2
 
  • #18
rlc said:
Negative.
Would that affect this equation in this way?:
0.02 = 0+(6.41E6)(Ty) - (0.5)(8.78E14)(Ty)^2
Yes.
 
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  • #19
0.02 = 0+(6.41E6)(Ty)-(0.5)(8.78E14)(Ty)^2 --> Ty = 4.5183E-9 s
0.04 = 0+(6.41E6)(Tx) --> Tx = 6.24e-9 s

Ty < Tx, so x = 0+(6.41e6)(4.5183E-9) = 0.029 m.
 
  • #20
Oh my gosh, thank you! That worked!
 
  • #21
So now I just have part B
b) The next electron has an initial velocity which has the same angle θ=45° with the lower plate and has a magnitude of 7.28×106 m/s. Will this electron strike one of the plates? If so, what is the horizontal distance from the left edge? If not enter the vertical position at which the particle leaves the space between the plates ( m).
 
  • #22
Vy = v0sin(45) =(7.28E6)(sin45)= 5.15E6 m/s
Vx = Vy = 5.15E6 m/s

0.02 = 0+(5.15E6)(Ty)-(0.5)(8.78E14)(Ty)^2 --> Ty = ?
**I'm not able to solve this equation. My calculator says that there is no sign change to find the intersection, and otherwise I'm getting imaginary numbers.**
0.04 = 0+(5.15E6)(Tx) --> Tx = 7.77e-9 s
 
  • #23
That means that the electron doesn't hit the plate. It can't make that distance.
How do I find the vertical position at which the particle leaves the space between the plates?
 
  • #24
=(vt(sinθ))−0.5gt^2
Should I use this equation for displacement?
 
  • #25
rlc said:
=(vt(sinθ))−0.5gt^2
Should I use this equation for displacement?
g?
 
  • #26
Gravity. But for this problem, would it instead be the electric field?
 
  • #27
rlc said:
Gravity. But for this problem, would it instead be the electric field?
The acceleration due to the electric field, yes.
 
  • #28
(1.6E-19)(5.00E3 N/C)=(9.11E-31)a
a=8.78E14

y=(vt(sinθ))−0.5gt^2
y=((5.15E6)(7.77e-9)(sin 45)) - 0.5(8.78E14)(7.77e-9)^2
y=0.00179 m

This is wrong. Do you see what I missed?
 
  • #29
I'm guessing it's something concerning the distance from end to end of 0.04 m.
 
  • #30
rlc said:
(5.15E6)(7.77e-9)(sin 45)
You've already used sin 45 to get the 5.15E6
 
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  • #31
y=(vt(sinθ))−0.5gt^2
y=((5.15E6 m/s)(7.77e-9 s)) - 0.5(8.78E14 m/s^2)(7.77e-9 s)^2
y=0.0135 m

I just checked this, and this is the correct answer (! yay!). Why is the 0.04 not involved in this last step like I thought? Is it because it is involved in the calculation for Tx, which is the time we used for this part?
 
  • #32
rlc said:
Why is the 0.04 not involved in this last step like I thought? Is it because it is involved in the calculation for Tx, which is the time we used for this part?
Yes.
 
  • #33
Thank you very much for helping me through this problem. I probably wouldn't have found those mistakes if you hadn't pointed them out to me.
 
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