What Speed Must an Electron Achieve to Orbit a Charged Glass Sphere?

AI Thread Summary
To determine the speed an electron must achieve to orbit a charged glass sphere with a diameter of 2.70 mm and a charge of +1.10 nC, the correct radius must include both the sphere's radius and the separation distance. Initial calculations incorrectly used only half the sphere's radius, leading to erroneous results. After adjusting the radius to account for the total distance from the center of the sphere to the electron's orbit, the revised speed calculation yielded approximately 2.469 x 10^7 m/s. The discussion also highlights the importance of using the electric field and force equations to derive the necessary speed for uniform circular motion. Understanding these principles illustrates the complexities of electrostatics and motion in physics.
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Homework Statement



A 2.70-mm-diameter glass sphere has a charge of + 1.10 nC.

What speed does an electron need to orbit the sphere 1.50mm above the surface?

Homework Equations



a = v^2/r -> force = m*v^2/r

electrostatic force = K*Q1*Q2/distance^2

therefore:

m*v^2/r=K*Q1*Q2/distance^2

The Attempt at a Solution



(9.10938291 × 10-31 kg)(v^2)/((2.7*10^-3)/2) = 8.99*10^9*(1.60*10^-19)*(1.1*10^-9)/(1.50*10^3)^2

I get 32282518 m/s which is the incorrect answer. However, I just noticed something. The radius I'm using is half of the sphere, should I be adding the separation distance to the radius as well?
 
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yes, the circle's radius is bigger than the glass radius.
 
lightgrav said:
yes, the circle's radius is bigger than the glass radius.

I got an answer of 4.69*10^7 m/s and it still says it's incorrect.
 
I didn't get that speed. why don't you cancel one of the radius variables, and try the calculation again.
 
Here are my values:

Mass of electron = 9.10938*10^-31 kg
v = ?
radius = half of glass sphere plus separation distance = (2.7/2)*10^-3+1.5*10^-3
K = 8.99*10^9
Q1 = 1.6*10^-19 (charge of electron in coulombs)
Q2 = 1.1*10^-9
distance = 1.5*10^-3

Now I'm realizing the distance should probably be (2.7/2)*10^-3+1.5*10^-3 also...
 
With the change, I'm getting an answer of 2.469*10^7 m/s. Does this look familiar?
 
I think it rounds up to 24.7 Mm/s ... the E-field has spread more at that distance, so is weaker at the electron.
 
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Well, this is obviously way too late, but for all of you physics nerds out there here it is.

Uniformly Charged Sphere Equation:

E=Q/(e0*4*r^2*pi)

E=electric field
Q=charge of sphere 1.1*10^-9 (in this case)
e0=8.85*10^-12
r=1.5*10^-3 (in this case)
pi = pi ;)

Take that E and plug it into the following Electric Force Equation:

E=F/q

E= what you solved for previously
F=Force that you want to derive
q=1.6*10^-19 (constant for charge of electron)

Take that F and plug it into this standard Force Equation:

F=ma

F=what you solved for previously
m=9.11*10^-31
a=what you want to solve forLast, but not least plug the a you solved for into the following Uniform Circular Motion Equation:

a=v^2/r

a=what you just solved for
v=what you want to solve for
r=1.5*10^-3 (in this case)That's it ladies and gents. Physics = MAGIC
 
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