What's wrong? Electron acceleration

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around calculating the acceleration of an electron that enters an electrically accelerated region. The initial velocity is 2.3e5 m/s, and it exits with a velocity of 4.10e6 m/s over a distance of 1.0 cm. The user initially calculated the time incorrectly, resulting in an erroneous acceleration value of 9.675e14 m/s². Another participant suggested recalculating time without scientific notation for clarity, leading to a more accurate time of 4.6189e-9 seconds. Ultimately, the correct acceleration was determined to be 8.37855e14 m/s² after correcting the calculations.
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I am working on this problem but I got it wrong. I'm not sure what happened.

Homework Statement



An electron with initial velocity Vo = 2.3e5 m/s enters a region 1.0 cm long where it is electrically accelerated. It emerges with velocity v = 4.10e6 m/s. What was its acceleration, assumed constant?

_________ m/s^2



Homework Equations



DeltaX = 1/2 (Vo + V)t

V = Vo +at

The Attempt at a Solution



I thought these were my known variables:

Vo = 2.3e5 m/s
DeltaX = 1.0 cm
Vf = 4.10e6 m/s

I tried to solve for t using DeltX equation. I got 4e-9 s. Then I tried to solve for a using my new value for t and V equation. I got 9.675e14 m/s^2 which is wrong. So anyone know what happened?
 
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Vr+V0= 4100000+ 230000= 433000 or 4.33 e5 m/s. Half of that is 2.665 e5 and deltax= 1 cm= 0.01 m. t= 0.01/(2.665 e5= 3.75 e-8 s, not -9. Try your calculation again, not using scientific notation this time. That may be what is confusing you.

Vf- V0= 4100000- 230000= 387000 or 3.87 e5 m/s. Dividing that by 3.75 e-8 gives an acceleration of 1 x 1014 m/s2. Your equations are right. Check your arithmetic.
 
Thank you. When I solved for t, i got .000000004 and I thought it would be like totally okay to just use 4e-9. When I tried it again I got a more specific number by using SN button on my calculator. Using 4.6189e-9 for t, I got the right answer. 8.37855e14
 
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