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Concept explainers
You are still fascinated by the process of inkjet printing, as described in the opening storyline for this chapter. You convince your father to take you to his manufacturing facility to see the machines that print expiration dates on eggs. You strike up a conversation with the technician operating the machine. He tells you that the ink drops are created using a piezoelectric crystal, acoustic waves, and the Plateau–Rayleigh instability, which creates uniform drops of mass m = 1.25 × 10−8 g. While you don’t understand the fancy words, you do recognize mass! The technician also tells you that the drops are charged to a controllable value of q and then projected vertically downward between parallel deflecting plates at a constant terminal speed of 18.5 m/s. The plates are ℓ = 2.25 cm long and have a uniform electric field of magnitude E = 6.35 × 104 N/C between them. Noting your interest in the process, the technician asks you, “If the position on the egg at which the drop is to be deposited requires that its deflection at the bottom end of the plates be 0.17 mm, what is the required charge on the drop?” You quickly get to work to find the answer.
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Chapter 22 Solutions
Physics for Scientists and Engineers
- please solve and answer the question correctly. Thank you!!arrow_forward18arrow_forward1. Some 1800 years ago Roman soldiers effectively used slings as deadly weapons. The length of these slings averaged about 81 cm and the lead shot that they used weighed about 30 grams. If in the wind up to a release, the shot rotated around the Roman slinger with a period of .14 seconds. Find the maximum acceleration of the shot before being released in m/s^2 and report it to two significant figures.arrow_forward
- 16arrow_forward11. A small charged plastic ball is vertically above another charged small ball in a frictionless test tube as shown in the figure. The balls are in equilibrium at a distance d= 2.0 cm apart. If the charge on one ball is tripled, find the new equilibrium distance between the balls in cm and report it to the proper number of significant figures.arrow_forward12. The electric field at a point 1.3 cm from a small object points toward the object with a strength of 180,000 N/C. Find the object's charge q, in nC to the proper number of significant figures. k = 1/4πε0 = 8.99 × 10^9 N ∙ m^2/C^2arrow_forward
- 14. When the potential difference between the plates of an ideal air-filled parallel plate capacitor is 35 V, the electric field between the plates has a strength of 670 V/m. If the plate area is 4.0 × 10^-2 m^2, what is the capacitance of this capacitor in pF? (ε0 = 8.85 × 10^-12 C^2/N ∙ m^2)arrow_forward10. A small styrofoam ball of mass 0.500 g is placed in an electric field of 1140 N/C pointing downward. What excess charge must be placed on the ball for it to remain suspended in the field? Report your answer in micro-Coulombs to three significant figures.arrow_forward2arrow_forward
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