What is the force on an electron in a CRT when it’s moving at 2.5 × 105 meters/second perpendicular to a magnetic field of 1.5 teslas? The charge for an electron is -1.6 × 10-19 coulombs.

Respuesta :

F = Magnetic Force
B = Magnetic Field
V = Velocity

*The vectors from the photo you get doing the left-hand rule.

The magnetic force is always perpendicular to the magnetic field.

And as told in the statement, the electron is moving perpendicular to a magnetic field, that is, the Velocity forms an 90 degree angle / Right angle with the magnetic field.

The formula to find the Magnetic Force is:

[tex]f = |q| \times v \times b \times sin \: \theta[/tex]

Where "q" is the Charge and the sin theta is the angle formed by the Velocity and Magnetic Field, in this case it's 90°. Sin 90° = 1.

[tex]f = |- 1.6 \times {10}^{ - 19} | \times 2.5 \times {10}^{5} \times 1.5 \times 1 \\ f = 6 \times {10}^{ - 19 + 5} \\ f = 6 \times {10}^{ - 14} \: newtons[/tex]
Newton (N) = C x m/s x T = (C x m x T)/s
Ver imagen limacharliesierra