Volume Charge Density of Proton Beam

AI Thread Summary
The discussion focuses on calculating the volume charge density of a 1.0 mA proton beam accelerated through a 1 keV potential difference. The participant arrives at a charge density of approximately 1.1x10^-4 C/m³, which aligns with another user's calculations. There is uncertainty regarding the accuracy of the solution provided in the notes, as the participant's result differs by a factor of 10^-4. The calculations involve using the equations for work and charge density, considering the beam's uniform current distribution. The conversation highlights the importance of verifying solutions in physics problems.
muonneutrino91
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Homework Statement


1.0 mA proton beam accelerated through potential difference of 1 keV.
Determine the volume charge density of the beam after acceleration assuming uniform current distribution within diameter of 5mm, with zero current outside of this.
Particle starting from rest.

Final answer I get is out by 10-4 to the solution given in my notes. Pretty certain its a mistake in the notes, somebody seconding this would give me peace at mind.

Homework Equations


ρ = I/νA
W = qV

ρ = charge density,
A = surface area of beam,
I = beam current,
v = proton velocity,
W = work
V = voltage

The Attempt at a Solution


W = 1.6x10-16 J = KEfinal (since starting from rest)

∴ 2W/mproton = v2
∴ v ≈4.4x105

A = π 6.25x10-6 m2

∴ ρ = 0.001 / π.(6.25x10-6).4.4x105 ≈1.1x10-4
 
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Hi, I just worked through the problem and obtained the same result as you, assuming your answer is in units of coulombs/cubic metre.
 
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TonyS said:
Hi, I just worked through the problem and obtained the same result as you, assuming your answer is in units of coulombs/cubic metre.

Thanks, TonyS.
 
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