What potential difference is required to bring the proton to rest?

AI Thread Summary
To bring a proton with an initial speed of 4.9 x 10^5 m/s to rest, a specific potential difference must be calculated using the kinetic energy formula. The discussion reveals confusion regarding the reduction of speed and kinetic energy by factors of four, with clarification that reducing speed by a factor of four means the new speed is one-fourth of the original, which corresponds to a reduction of three-fourths of the initial speed. Participants emphasize the importance of understanding the change in kinetic energy and speed to determine the required potential difference accurately. The conversation highlights a consensus that the problem's wording may be misleading, leading to errors in interpretation. Overall, the focus remains on correctly applying physics equations to find the necessary potential differences for the given scenarios.
Jbreezy
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Homework Statement


A proton has an initial speed of 4.9 105 m/s.
(a) What potential difference is required to bring the proton to rest?

(b) What potential difference is required to reduce the initial speed of the proton by a factor of 4?

(c) What potential difference is required to reduce the initial kinetic energy of the proton by a factor of 4?

Homework Equations



ΔK = -qV
Δk = mv^2/2

The Attempt at a Solution





For part a.)

Δk = (kf - Ki). Kf is 0 because your stopping it

[m(v_i)^2 ]/2q = V
I just pop in my values. Look OK?


For part b I'm unsure.

I said V_i = V/4 So I get

[m((v_i/4))^2 ]/2q = V I'm unsure.
The last one I would just take the answer from a and divide by 4.

Thanks,
I;m worried about b.
 
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in part b you need to reduce the k.e. by 3/4, not just 1/4. Solve for the new v.
part c is solved by part b.
 
rude man said:
in part b you need to reduce the k.e. by 3/4, not just 1/4. Solve for the new v.
part c is solved by part b.

Thanks for the reply. I'm sure I understand you though. Why am I reducing it by (3/4)?
And why would I solve for the new V? I want the potential difference.
 
Jbreezy said:
Thanks for the reply. I'm sure I understand you though. Why am I reducing it by (3/4)?

Because that's what the problem asked. "To reduce by a factor of four" means to go from 1 to 1/4.
And why would I solve for the new V? I want the potential difference.
[/quote]

Right you are. My bad. But again, the reduction is by 3/4 of the initial speed, not 1/4.
 
rude man said:
Because that's what the problem asked. "To reduce by a factor of four" means to go from 1 to 1/4.

Right you are. My bad. But again, the reduction is by 3/4 of the initial speed, not 1/4.[/QUOTE]

Its Ok. Keeps me thinking. Can you please explain to me why you reduce by 3/4? I feel confused because first you say

"To reduce by a factor of four" means to go from 1 to 1/4.
Which is what I thought so I reduced the velocity in part b by 1/4. Vi = v/4. But your saying 3/4? I'm not following you.

Wait are you saying this;
You want the change in velocity to be (1/4) of what it was. So


Can you say (1/2)m(Δv)^2 = qV
so, (1/2)m(Vf - (1/4)Vi)^2 = qV which is (1/2)m((3/4)V)^2 = qV ?If that is the case I don't get it . Might not be though.
Thanks
 
The general formula is 1/2 mvf2 = 1/2 mvi2 - qV. q and V are considered positive.

For part b, vf = vi/4
For part c, 1/2 mvf2 = (1/2 mvi2 )/4.

The rest is just algebra.
 
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Jbreezy said:
Right you are. My bad. But again, the reduction is by 3/4 of the initial speed, not 1/4.
That's what rude man meant - reduce by 3/4 of the initial speed.
Reducing x by a factor of n means the new value is x/n. The change is (x-x/n) = x(1-1/n).
 
So I'm right. It means divide but

haruspex said:
That's what rude man meant - reduce by 3/4 of the initial speed.
Reducing x by a factor of n means the new value is x/n. The change is (x-x/n) = x(1-1/n).

The change is what part is confusing me. Why do you want the change and not simply x/n ?
Thank you.
 
Jbreezy said:
So I'm right. It means divide but



The change is what part is confusing me. Why do you want the change and not simply x/n ?
Thank you.

Because V is what's needed to reduce (change) the speed (part b) or k.e. (part c). The reduction is 3/4 of the original speed or k.e.
 
  • #10
Actually it ended up being V/4 not (2/4)V like you guys had suggested. I think that this was a poorly written question. I asked my tutor and he agreed with you guys but we tried the answer and it was wrong. I'm going to say this question is poor. Thanks for the help
 
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