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TBR Chapter 8, Passage VI Question 41 states:
To accelerate anion particles from left to right in Region 1, and deflect those particles out of the page in Region 2, how must the E and B fields be aligned in Figure 1?
A) Anode plate left, cathode plate right, B field up
B) Anode plate left, cathode plate right, B field down
C) Anode plate right, cathode plate left, B field up
D) Anode plate right, cathode plate left, B field down
The answer is: D, I chose B
I understand that the B-field has to be down because of the RHR: thumb points L to R, B field points down, which gives you a force into the page (for a proton) and out of the page (for an electron).
What I don't understand is the cathode/anode answer. I figured, electrons move opposite the electric field; so if the field points R to L (anode plate left, cathode plate right), then the electron will move L to R. If the electron is moving towards the anode plate, wouldn't it be repelled by it?
To accelerate anion particles from left to right in Region 1, and deflect those particles out of the page in Region 2, how must the E and B fields be aligned in Figure 1?
A) Anode plate left, cathode plate right, B field up
B) Anode plate left, cathode plate right, B field down
C) Anode plate right, cathode plate left, B field up
D) Anode plate right, cathode plate left, B field down
The answer is: D, I chose B
I understand that the B-field has to be down because of the RHR: thumb points L to R, B field points down, which gives you a force into the page (for a proton) and out of the page (for an electron).
What I don't understand is the cathode/anode answer. I figured, electrons move opposite the electric field; so if the field points R to L (anode plate left, cathode plate right), then the electron will move L to R. If the electron is moving towards the anode plate, wouldn't it be repelled by it?