Older televisions display a picture using a device called a cathode ray tube, where electrons are emitted at high speed and collide with a phosphorescent surface, causing light to be emitted. The paths of the electrons are altered by magnetic fields. Consider one such electron that is emitted with an initial velocity of 1.85 107 m/s in the horizontal direction when magnetic forces deflect the electron with a vertically upward acceleration of 5.45 1015 m/s2. The phosphorescent screen is a horizontal distance of 5.6 cm away from the point where the electron is emitted. (a) How much time does the electron take to travel from the emission point to the screen? 3e-9 Correct: Your answer is correct. s (b) How far does the electron travel vertically before it hits the screen?
Older televisions display a picture using a device called a cathode ray tube, where electrons are...
Older televisions display a picture using a device called a cathode ray tube, where electrons are emitted at high speed and collide with a phosphorescent surface, causing light to be emitted. The paths of the electrons are altered by magnetic fields. Consider one such electron that is emitted with an initial velocity of 2.05 x 10^7 m/s in the horizontal direction when magnetic forces deflect the electron with a vertically upward acceleration of 5.30 x 10^15 m/s2. The phosphorescent screen...
In a cathode ray tube (CRT) similar to those used in older television sets, a beam of electrons is steered to different places on a phosphor screen, which glows at locations hit by electrons. The CRT is evacuated, so there are few gas molecules present for the electrons to run into. Electric forces are used to accelerate electrons of mass 9 × 10-31 kg to a speed 1.7 × 107 m/s, after which they pass between positively and negatively charged...