Question about the motion of a charged particle

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the motion of a charged particle in crossed electric (E) and magnetic (B) fields, specifically addressing the conditions under which the motion in the Z direction is zero. Participants explore the implications of the Lorentz force law and the relationship between electric force, velocity, and field direction.

Discussion Character

  • Technical explanation
  • Debate/contested

Main Points Raised

  • One participant questions why the motion in the Z plane is zero if the electric force is independent of velocity, suggesting a misunderstanding of the relationship between force and motion.
  • Another participant asserts that a charged particle can have velocity components in any direction, challenging the initial claim about motion in the Z direction.
  • Some participants clarify that while the acceleration in the Z direction is zero, this does not imply that the motion is zero, emphasizing the distinction between acceleration and velocity.
  • It is noted that the magnetic force has no component in the Z direction when the magnetic field is oriented along Z and the electric field along Y.
  • Participants discuss the Lorentz force law, indicating that the electric force is directed along the electric field and does not depend on the velocity component in the Z direction.
  • There is a correction regarding the direction of the electric force, particularly in the case of negative charges, which some participants highlight as a point of confusion.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express differing views on the relationship between electric force, velocity, and motion in the Z direction. There is no consensus on the initial claim regarding the motion being zero, as some participants challenge this assertion while others provide clarifications.

Contextual Notes

Some participants express confusion regarding the concepts of force, motion, and velocity, indicating potential misunderstandings that remain unresolved. The discussion highlights the importance of distinguishing between these concepts in the context of charged particle dynamics.

rehab
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Hi, I have a question about the motion of a charged particle in crossed E and B fields. if B was pointing in the Z direction and E in the y direction then the component of the motion in the Z plane = 0. The only reason for this to happen is that the electric force due to the E field depends on the dot product of the E field and the velocity but the electric force = qE which is independent of the velocity, so why is the motion in the Z plane equal zero??
 
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rehab said:
if B was pointing in the Z direction and E in the y direction then the component of the motion in the Z plane = 0
This is not true. The charged particle can have a component of velocity in any direction, completely regardless of the fields. Why do you think that it could not?
 
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rehab said:
##\dots~## so why is the motion in the Z plane equal zero??
The acceleration in the Z direction is zero. That does not mean that the "motion" in the Z direction is zero. Are you confusing acceleration and velocity?
 
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Dale said:
This is not true. The charged particle can have a component of velocity in any direction, completely regardless of the fields. Why do you think that it could not?
here I'm not talking about the component of velocity , I'm asking about why the total motion=force in the z direction is zero ?
 
kuruman said:
The acceleration in the Z direction is zero. That does not mean that the "motion" in the Z direction is zero. Are you confusing acceleration and velocity?
Yeah I know that but I meant the total motion in Z direction due to the fields , regardless of the velocity
 
rehab said:
here I'm not talking about the component of velocity , I'm asking about why the total motion=force in the z direction is zero ?
If the magnetic field is in the z-direction, the magnetic force has zero component along the z-direction.
If the electric field is in the y-direction, the electric force has zero component along the z-direction.
The sum of two zeroes is identically zero.
 
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kuruman said:
If the magnetic field is in the z-direction, the magnetic force has zero component along the z-direction.
If the electric field is in the y-direction, the electric force has zero component along the z-direction.
The sum of two zeroes is identically zero.
my question is why the electric force has a zero component along the z-direction if it does not depend on the dot product of the E field and the velocity in Z?
 
rehab said:
here I'm not talking about the component of velocity , I'm asking about why the total motion=force in the z direction is zero ?
This is very confusing. Motion does not equal force. Motion is velocity. They are two very different concepts.

If ##\vec B = (0,0,B_z)## and ##\vec E = (0,E_y,0)## then the force on a charge ##q## moving with velocity ##\vec v=(v_x,v_y,v_z)## is given by $$\vec F = q \vec E + q \vec v \times \vec B = q (B_z v_y, E_y - B_z v_x, 0)$$ The force from the E field is in the direction of the E field and the force from the B field is in the direction perpendicular to both the B field and the velocity. So neither field produces a force in the z direction in this setup.

More generally, if B and E are perpendicular to each other then you will never get a force in the direction of the B field. This is because B produces forces perpendicular to B and E produces forces parallel to E. So if they are perpendicular to each other then no component of the total force will be in the direction of B.
 
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rehab said:
my question is why the electric force has a zero component along the z-direction if it does not depend on the dot product of the E field and the velocity in Z?
Because the E field is along the y-direction. You said so yourself. It cannot have a z-component.
rehab said:
##\dots~## if B was pointing in the Z direction and E in the y direction ##\dots~##
 
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  • #10
Doesn't the Lorentz force law say it all?$$\vec F = q(\vec E + \vec v \times \vec B)$$
 
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  • #11
PeroK said:
Doesn't the Lorentz force law say it all?$$\vec F = q(\vec E + \vec v \times \vec B)$$
Yes, it does. However, it seems that OP is confused thinking that the electric force is and is not velocity-dependent,
rehab said:
The only reason for this to happen is that the electric force due to the E field depends on the dot product of the E field and the velocity but the electric force = qE which is independent of the velocity ##~\dots##
 
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  • #12
rehab said:
my question is why the electric force has a zero component along the z-direction if it does not depend on the dot product of the E field and the velocity in Z?
I'm sorry to say that I don't understand anything you've written in any of your posts. Sorry!
 
  • #13
rehab said:
my question is why the electric force has a zero component along the z-direction if it does not depend on the dot product of the E field and the velocity in Z?
@rehab, you may be confused due to an incorrect concept of some sort.

When a charge (##q##) is in an electric field (##\vec E##), the charge experiences an electric force (##\vec {F_E})##.

##\vec {F_E} = q\vec E## (note that ##q## is a scalar)

That means ##\vec {F_E}## is always in the same direction as ##\vec E##.

[Edit/correction: as pointed out by kuruman in Post #14, if ##q## is negative then ##\vec {F_E}## is in the opposite direction to ##\vec E##.]

The direction of the charge's velocity (##\vec v##) is completely unrelated to this.

Maybe you are confusing this with power (##P = \vec F \cdot \vec v##) which is a different issue.
 
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  • #14
Steve4Physics said:
That means ##\vec {F_E}## is always in the same direction as ##\vec E##.
You probably meant to say that ##\vec {F_E}## is always in the same direction as ##q\vec E##. The charge is not known to be positive.
 
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  • #15
kuruman said:
You probably meant to say that ##\vec {F_E}## is always in the same direction as ##q\vec E##. The charge is not known to be positive.
Yes indeed!
 

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