A particle passes through a mass spectrometer as illustrated in the figure below
ID: 1547774 • Letter: A
Question
A particle passes through a mass spectrometer as illustrated in the figure below. The electric field between the plates of the velocity selector has a magnitude of 8340 V/m, and the magnetic fields in both the velocity selector and the deflection chamber have magnitudes of 0.0936 T. In the deflection chamber the particle strikes a photographic plate 58.0 cm removed from its exit point after traveling in a semicircle.
(a) What is the mass-to-charge ratio of the particle?
kg/C
(b) What is the mass of the particle if it is doubly ionized?
kg
(c) What is its identity, assuming it's an element? (Enter the name of an element.)
Explanation / Answer
Usually you are asked for charge to mass riatio. But I'll assume there is no mistake and you want mass to charge ratio.
The radius of motion = 58 cm/2 = 29 cm = 0.29m
For the velocity selector, the electric force balances the magentic force so the particle moves in a straight line:
qE = Bqv
v = E/B = 8340/0.0936 = 89102.56m/s
For the circular motion, the centripetal force is provided by the magnetic force:
mv²/r = Bqv
mv/r = Bq
m/q = Br/v
= 0.0936x0.29/89102.56
= 3.046x10 kg/C
_________________
If it is doubly ionised its charge = 2x1.6x10¹ C = 3.2x10¹C
m = 3.046x10 x 3.2x10¹ = 9.747x10² kg
Since a nucleon has a mass of about 1.67x10²kg and the mass of any electrons is negigible, the particle contains
9.747x10²/(1.67x10²) = 58 nucleons
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