Answer:
speed of electrons = 3.25 × m/s
acceleration in term g is 3.9 × g.
radius of circular orbit is 2.76 × m
Explanation:
given data
voltage = 3 kV
magnetic field = 0.66 T
solution
law of conservation of energy
PE = KE
qV = 0.5 × m × v²
v =
v =
v = 3.25 × m/s
and
magnetic force on particle movie in magnetic field
F = Bqv
ma = Bqv
a =
a =
a = 3.82 × m/s²
and acceleration in term g
a =
a = 3.9 × g
acceleration in term g is 3.9 × g.
and
electron moving in circular orbit has centripetal force
F =
Bqv =
r =
r =
r = 2.76 × m
radius of circular orbit is 2.76 × m
None of the choices is an appropriate response.
There's no such thing as the temperature of a molecule. Temperature and
pressure are both outside-world manifestations of the energy the molecules
have. But on the molecular level, what it is is the kinetic energy with which
they're all scurrying around.
When the fuel/air mixture is compressed during the compression stroke,
the temperature is raised to the flash point of the mixture. The work done
during the compression pumps energy into the molecules, their kinetic
energy increases, and they begin scurrying around fast enough so that
when they collide, they're able to stick together, form a new molecule,
and release some of their kinetic energy in the form of heat.
Answer:
Micro and radio waves.
Lower energy.
Gamma rays.
Explanation:
The electromagnetic spectrum is the range of frequencies of electromagnetic radiation and their respective wavelengths.
Ionising radiation os defined as the energy required of photons of a wave to ionize atoms, causing chemical reactions.
The energy of the wave depends on both the amplitude and the frequency. If the energy of each wavelength is a discrete packet of energy, a high-frequency wave will deliver more of these packets per unit time than a low-frequency wave. In summary, the longer the wavelength, the lower the energy to ionise.
The velocity of a wave is directly proportional to the frequency of that wave.
c = f * lambda
Where,
c = velocity of the wave
f = frequency of the wave = 1/time
Lambda = wavelength.
From the above expression, the longer the wavelength, lambda the shorter the frequency.
Examples of waves with longer wavelengths are, micro and radio waves, while radiations with shorter wavelengths like gamma rays.