The amount of meat in prehistoric diets can be determined by measuring the ratio
ID: 1494417 • Letter: T
Question
The amount of meat in prehistoric diets can be determined by measuring the ratio of the isotopes nitrogen-15 to nitrogen-14 in bone from human remains. Carnivores concentrate 15N, so this ratio tells archaeologists how much meat was consumed by ancient people. Suppose you use a velocity selector (Figure 1) to obtain singly ionized (missing one electron) atoms of speed 513 km/s and want to bend them within a uniform magnetic field of 0.510T. The measured masses of these isotopes are 2.35×1026kg (14N) and 2.46×1026kg (15N). Find the separation of the 14N and 15N isotopes at the detector.
(NB: The answer is not 1.76 cm, 1.88102m, 9.43103m or 2 cm)
Explanation / Answer
Radius of the path is r = (m*v)/(q*B)
r1 = (2.35*10^-26*513*1000)/(1.6*10^-19*0.51) = 0.1477 m
r2 = (2.46*10^-26*513*1000)/(1.6*10^-19*0.51) = 0.154 m
seperation is r2-r1 = 0.154-0.1477 = 0.0063 m = 0.63 cm
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