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This post describes the motion of a charge in crossed electric and magnetic fields as:

https://www.feynmanlectures.caltech.edu/II_29.html#Ch29-F20

$$ x = r \cos ωt + \dfrac EB t\\ y = r \sin ωt\\ $$

Can you please explain how these equations are derived. Why is drift velocity equal to E/B?

I understand the magnetic field makes the particle rotate while electric field should try to make it move along with it. What's the intuition for the particle to drift right?


In a velocity selector, equating $qE = qvB$ would give drift velocity as E/B. But there was no gyration involved??

Qmechanic
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Shub
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1 Answers1

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Think about it this way:

Start with only the magnetic field. The charged particle is on a circular orbit. The force the magnetic field exerts is proportional to its velocity. The faster the particle, the smaller the radius.

Lets say the particle rotates clockwise and is at its most left point in the orbit (i.e. velocity vector points in positive y-direction). Now turn on the electric field in positive y-direction. When the velocity points along the E field, you get maximal acceleration from the E field. So after a some time along this direction, the radius (probably better to call it curvature now) is going to get smaller. The particle's velocity vector then turns away from the direction of the E field and the acceleration decreases, until it points anti-parallel to the E field, where you have the smallest acceleration. Hence the radius is going to decrease.

Then everything starts again. Putting all of this together, you get a net drift in positive x direction.

For why the drift velocity is exactly $E/B$, I can't give you an intuitive answer. But it definitely makes sense that the drift velocity increases with E and decreases with B, so it is intuitive that it is an expression that combines these two thoughts.

Samuel
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  • Why is gyration not observed in velocity selector? @Samuel – Shub Aug 13 '22 at 08:42
  • When the particle enters the aparatus, the force generated by the electric and magnetic field are antiparallel. The force from the electric field is velocity independent, while the force from the magnetic field is proportional to $v$. If $v=E/B$, the two forces have the exact same magnitude but point in opposite directions, so they cancel eacht other out and the particle flies in a straight line. – Samuel Aug 14 '22 at 11:25
  • Yep. So this means in the case of gyration the particle starts from rest? – Shub Aug 15 '22 at 03:14
  • Can you please derive the equations of motion in your answer? @Samuel – Shub Aug 15 '22 at 03:20