Table of Contents [hide]
- 1 When cathode rays pass through the magnetic field they?
- 2 Are cathode rays deflected by magnetic field?
- 3 Do cathode rays depend on material of electrode?
- 4 Which rays are not deflected by magnetic field?
- 5 What happens when magnets attract each other?
- 6 Why do magnets only attract metals?
- 7 Why are cathode rays produced at low pressure?
- 8 How can I observe the effect of a magnetic field on cathode rays?
- 9 Do cathode rays travel in straight lines?
- 10 What happens to electrons in a magnetic tube?
When cathode rays pass through the magnetic field they?
When an external electric field is applied, the cathode ray is deflected toward the positive pole. When a magnetic field is applied, the cathode ray is deflected from its normal straight path into a curved path.
Are cathode rays deflected by magnetic field?
Cathode rays are deflected by a magnetic field. The rays are deflected away from a negatively charged electrical field and toward a positively charge field. The charge/mass ratio for the electron is 1.8 × 108 Coulombs/gram.
Why do magnets not attract anything?
The atoms align with a magnetic field, but the alignment is so weak that an ordinary magnet does not attract it.
Do cathode rays depend on material of electrode?
The characteristics of cathode rays do not depend upon the material of electrodes and the nature of the gas present in the cathode ray tube.
Which rays are not deflected by magnetic field?
Just as with electric fields, gamma radiation is not deflected by magnetic fields. When alpha and beta particles move in magnetic fields they experience a deflecting force – provided their motion is not parallel to the field.
Do cathode rays deflect in electric field?
Cathode rays (electron beam or e-beam) are streams of electrons observed in discharge tubes. Cathode-ray tubes (CRTs) use a focused beam of electrons deflected by electric or magnetic fields to render an image on a screen.
What happens when magnets attract each other?
When two magnets are brought together, the opposite poles will attract one another, but the like poles will repel one another. This is similar to electric charges. The earth is like a giant magnet, but unlike two free hanging magnets, the north pole of a magnet is attracted to the north pole of the earth.
Why do magnets only attract metals?
In metals there are two types of electrons: bound electrons and free electrons. The free electrons are free to move between atoms, and are the cause of conductivity in metals. The bound electrons are stuck to the individual atoms. So, some metals are attracted to magnets because they are full of tinier magnets.
Why cathode rays does not depend on nature of gas?
the properties of cathode rays do not depend upon the nature of gas because cathode rays consists of electrons and all types of gases consist same type of electrons.
Why are cathode rays produced at low pressure?
High pressure means more number of gas particles. More number of gas particles leads to increased number of collisions with ejected electrons(contained in the cathode rays). This decreases the energy of the electrons and hampers the experimental observations. So, a low pressure gas is used in a cathode ray experiment.
How can I observe the effect of a magnetic field on cathode rays?
Observe the effect of a magnetic field on cathode rays by using the Magnet Position slider to move a horseshoe magnet (its north pole facing you) so that its poles straddle the cathode ray tube.
How are electrons deflected in a magnetic field?
That rule describes how a charged particle (our electron) moving in a magnetic field will be deflected by that field at a right angle to both the field and to the direction of the particle. (As you apply that rule, remember that the electrons in the cathode ray are travelling opposite the flow of conventional current.)
Do cathode rays travel in straight lines?
Reaching this understanding required many small but important experimental steps to determine, for instance, whether cathode rays travel in straight lines, carry energy or, as explored in this tutorial, are affected by magnetic fields. Scientists used special vacuum tubes, such as the Crookes tube and the cathode ray tube, to study this phenomenon.
What happens to electrons in a magnetic tube?
What happens in the tube is a consequence of the Lorentz Force, which is explained by the left hand rule. That rule describes how a charged particle (our electron) moving in a magnetic field will be deflected by that field at a right angle to both the field and to the direction of the particle.