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Solution
dp
F=
dt
where F is the force and p is the momentum. Using the relativistic form of momentum gives
the relativistic form of Newtons second law.
!
d mv
F= p
dt 1 v 2 /c2
In the case of a charged particle moving in a magnetic field, the force F = qv B. If |v| = v
is constant and B and v are perpendicular, then the force F will perpendicular to both B
and v. In this case the force will not do any work on the charged particle, thus the speed
2 CHAPTER 2. RELATIVITY II. SELECTED PROBLEMS
stays constant in magnitude but will change direction under the effect of the force, we then
have:
!
d m
qvB = p
dt 1 v 2 /c2
m dv
= p (2.1)
1 v /c dt
2 2
where dv/dt is the centripetal acceleration produce by th force and given by v 2 /r, Equation
(2.1) becomes:
v2
m
qvB = p
1 v 2 /c2 r
qvBr v2
= p
m 1 v 2 /c2
r
qBr v2
v = 1 2 (2.2)
m c
Under the effect of the centripetal force the particle moves in a circular path and covers a
distance of one full circumference in a time T (the period), where f = 1/T , is the frequency
of the circular motion or the number of full rotations per second. So the speed v is then:
2r
v =
T
2r
T =
v
v
f = (2.3)
2r
Using Equation (2.2) in Equation (2.3) we get:
r
qB v2
f= 1 2
2m c
(a) If S 0 is moving at speed v in the standard way, find the momentum p0 and energy E 0
observed in S 0 . (Hint: Use the Lorentz velocity transformation to find p0 and E 0 . Does
E = E 0 and p = p0 ?
(b) Show that E 2 p2 c2 is equal to E 02 p02 c2 .
Solution
(a) In the the S frame, the speed of the particle is u, momentum is p and energy is E such
that:
mu
p = p (2.4)
1 u2 /c2
mc2
E = p (2.5)
1 u2 /c2
uv
u0 = (2.6)
1 uv/c2
mu0
p0 = p (2.7)
1 u02 /c2
m[(u v)/(1 uv/c2 )]
= p (2.8)
1 [(u v)/(1 uv/c2 )]2 (1/c2 )
mc2
E0 = p (2.9)
1 u02 /c2
mc2
= p (2.10)
1 [(u v)/(1 uv/c2 )]2 (1/c2 )
Comparing Equations (2.4) and (2.8) we see that p 6= p0 and comparing Equations (2.5)
and (2.10) we find E 6= E 0 .
m2 c4 m 2 u2 c2
E 2 p2 c2 =
1 u2 /c2 1 u2 /c2
m2 c4 u2
= 1 2
1 u2 /c2 c
2 4
= mc (2.11)
m2 c4 m2 u02 c2
E 02 p02 c2 =
1 u02 /c2 1 u02 /c2
m2 c4 u02
= 1 2
1 u02 /c2 c
= m2 c4 (2.12)
E 2 p2 c2 = E 02 p02 c2
Calculate the binding energy in M eV per nucleon in the isotope 126 C. Note that the mass of
this isotope is exactly 12 u, and the masses of the proton and neutron are 1.007276 u and
1.008665 u, respectively.
Solution
12
Atomic mass unit (u) is defined as exactly the mass of 6C divided by 12, i.e.
1.99264648 1026
1u = kg
12
= 1.66053873 1027 kg
= 1.66053873 1027 c2 J/c2
= 1.66053873 1027 (2.99792458 108 )2 J/c2
= 1.49241778 1010 J/c2
1.49249287 1010
= M eV /c2
1.602176362 1013
= 931.494 M eV /c2
12
The nucleus of 6C has six protons and 6 neutrons so its binding energy BE is:
BE = mc2 M eV
= m126 C 6mp 6mn
= (6 1.007276 + 6 1.008665 12) 931.494 M eV
= 89.09 M eV
A nucleon is a generic name for a neutron or a proton, so 126 C has 12 nucleons, so the binding
energy per nucleon is:
89.11
BE/nucleon = = 7.42 M eV
12
An electron having kinetic energy K = 1.000M eV makes a head-on collision with a positron
at rest. (A positron is an antimatter particle that has the same mass as the electron but
opposite charge.) In the collision the two particles annihilate each other and are replaced
by two rays of equal energy, each traveling at equal angles with the electrons direction
of motion. (Gamma rays are massless particles of electromagnetic radiation having energy
E = pc.) Find the energy E, momentum p, and angle of emission of the rays.
Solution
K + 2me c2 = 2E
1
E = K + m e c2
2
= 0.500 + 0.511
= 1.011M eV
Where K is the kinetic energy of the electron, me is the rest mass of the electron and the
positron, and E is the energy of each gamma ray.
pe = 2p cos
where pe is the momentum of the incident electron and p is the momentum of each gamma ray.
Since the particles of the gamma rays (photons) are massless, then p = E/c = 1.011 M eV /c,
using:
p
pe c = E 2 (me c2 )2
p e
= (K + me c2 )2 (me c2 )2
p
= K 2 + (me c2 )2 + 2Kme c2 (me c2 )2
1p 2
pe = K + 2Kme c2
c
1p
= (1.00)2 + 2 1.00 0.511
c
= 1.422 M eV /c
pe
cos =
2p
pe
=
2E/c
1.422
=
2 1.011
= 0.703
= 45.3
The creation and study of new elementary particles is an important part of contemporary
physics. Especially interesting is the discovery of a very massive particle. To create a particle
of mass M requires an energy M c2 . With enough energy, an exotic particle can be created
by allowing a fast-moving particle of ordinary matter, such as a proton, to collide with a
similar target particle. Let us consider a perfectly inelastic collision between two protons: An
incident proton with mass m, kinetic energy K, and momentum magnitude p joins with an
originally stationary target proton to form a single product particle of mass M . You might
think that the creation of a new product particle, 9 times more massive than in a previous
experiment, would require just 9 times more energy for the incident proton. Unfortunately,
not all of the kinetic energy of the incoming proton is available to create the product particle,
since conservation of momentum requires that after the collision the system as a whole still
must have some kinetic energy. Only a fraction of the energy of the incident particle is thus
available to create a new particle. You will determine how the energy available for particle
creation depends on the energy of the moving proton. Show that the energy available to
create a product particle is given by
r
2 2 K
M c = 2mc 1 +
2mc2
From this result, when the kinetic energy K of the incident proton is large compared to its
rest energy mc2 , we see that M approaches 2mK/c. Thus if the energy of the incoming
proton is increased by a factor of 9, the mass you can create increases only by a factor of 3.
This disappointing result is the main reason that most modern accelerators, such as those at
CERN (in Europe), at Fermilab (near Chicago), at SLAC (at Stanford), and at DESY (in
Germany), use colliding beams. Here the total momentum of a pair of interacting particles
can be zero. The center of mass can be at rest after the collision, so in principle all of the
initial kinetic energy can be used for particle creation, according to
2 2 2 K
M c = 2mc + K = 2mc 1 +
2mc2
where K is the total kinetic energy of two identical colliding particles. Here, if K mc2 ,
we have M directly proportional to K, as we would desire. These machines are difficult to
build and to operate, but they open new vistas in physics.
Solution
The collision two-protons collision processes are shown in Figure (2.2). The top left is the
situation before collision in the fixed target experiment and the top right is the situation
after collision in the fixed target case. The bottom left is the situation before collision in
the colliding beams experiments and the bottom left is the situation after collision in the
colliding beams case.
Figure 2.2: Collision of two protons. Top: fixed target collision. Bottom: colliding beams
collision. Left: before collision. Right: after collision.
In the fixed target experiments the target proton is at rest while the projectile proton is
moving toward the target, as a rest to conserve momentum, the final particle should have
equal momentum and in the same direction as the projectile momentum.
= K1 + mc2
E1
= mc2
E2
(2.13)
E12 = p21 c2 + m2 c4
p2 =0
Ef = E1 + E2
Ef2 = E12 + 2E1 E2 + E22
p2f c2 + M 2 c4 = p21 c2 + m2 c4 + 2(K1 + mc2 )mc2 + m2 c4 (2.15)
pf = p1 (2.16)
Using Equation (2.16) in Equation (2.15) we get:
Ef = M c2 (2.19)
Conservation of mass-energy requires:
Ef = Ei + E2
1 1
M c2 = K + mc2 + K + mc2
2 2
= 2mc2 +K
2 K
= 2mc 1 + (2.20)
2mc2
Note that we chose the total kinetic energy in the initial state to be the same in both cases.
In the fixed target case, one proton carries a total kinetic energy of K and in the colliding
beams case, the two protons carry a total kinetic energy of K, i.e. each carry 12 K.