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Before the advent of solid-state electronics, vacuum tubes were widely used in r

ID: 1341344 • Letter: B

Question

Before the advent of solid-state electronics, vacuum tubes were widely used in radios and other devices. A simple type of vacuum tube known as a diode consists essentially of two electrodes within a highly evacuated enclosure. One electrode, the cathode, is maintained at a high temperature and emits electrons from its surface. A potential difference of a few hundred volts is maintained between the cathode and the other electrode, known as the anode, with the anode at the higher potential. (Figure 1)

Suppose a diode consists of a cylindrical cathode with a radius of 6.200×102 cm , mounted coaxially within a cylindrical anode with a radius of 0.5580 cm . The potential difference between the anode and cathode is 350 V . An electron leaves the surface of the cathode with zero initial speed (vinitial=0 ). Find its speed vfinal when it strikes the anode.

Express your answer numerically in meters per second.

Explanation / Answer

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The final KE of the electron is the product q*V where q is the electronic charge 1.6*10^-19C and V is the potential difference through which it moves. This is 350v (I assume).

You can equate the energy qV to the usual expression for KE (0.5mv^2) to calculate speed (v). m is the mass of the electron (9.1*10^-31kg)

0.5mv^2 = qV

v = sqrt (2qV/m) = 11.1*10^6m/s

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