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Question: A proton and an alpha particle both are accelerated through the same potential difference. The ratio...

A proton and an alpha particle both are accelerated through the same potential difference. The ratio of the corresponding de-Broglie wavelength is:
(a) 22 (b) 122 (c) 2 (d) 2 (a){\text{ 2}}\sqrt 2 \\\ (b){\text{ }}\dfrac{1}{{2\sqrt 2 }} \\\ (c){\text{ 2}} \\\ (d){\text{ }}\sqrt 2 \\\

Explanation

Solution

Hint – In this question use the formula for kinetic energy that is K.E=12m.v2K.E = \dfrac{1}{2}m.{v^2} and use that the momentum is the product of the mass of the particle and the velocity of the particle so P=mvP = mv. Write the formula for kinetic energy in terms of momentum and consider that the de-Broglie wavelength (λ\lambda ) of a particle of mass m and moving with a velocity v is given as λ=hmv\lambda = \dfrac{h}{{mv}}. This will help approaching the problem.

Complete step-by-step solution -
As we know that the kinetic energy (K.E) of the particle is given as
K.E=12m.v2\Rightarrow K.E = \dfrac{1}{2}m.{v^2}................... (1)
Where, m = mass of the particle
v = velocity of the particle.
Now as we all know that the momentum is the product of the mass of the particle and the velocity of the particle so we have,
P=mvP = mv................. (2)
Where, P = momentum
m = mass of the particle
v = velocity of the particle.
Now from equation (1) and (2) we have,
K.E=12p2m\Rightarrow K.E = \dfrac{1}{2}\dfrac{{{p^2}}}{m}
P=2m(K.E)\Rightarrow P = \sqrt {2m\left( {K.E} \right)}..................... (3)
Now as we know that the de-Broglie wavelength (λ\lambda ) of a particle of mass m and moving with a velocity v is given as,
λ=hmv\Rightarrow \lambda = \dfrac{h}{{mv}}, where h = planck's constant.
Now from equation (2) we have,
λ=hP\Rightarrow \lambda = \dfrac{h}{P}
Now from equation (3) we have,
λ=h2m(K.E)\Rightarrow \lambda = \dfrac{h}{{\sqrt {2m\left( {K.E} \right)} }}..................... (4)
Now let the de-Broglie wavelength of the proton beλ1{\lambda _1}, mass m1{m_1} and kinetic energy K.E = eV, where (e) is the charge on proton and v is the velocity of the proton by which it is moving so from the equation (4) we have,
λ1=h2m1eV\Rightarrow {\lambda _1} = \dfrac{h}{{\sqrt {2{m_1}eV} }}.................. (5)
Now for an alpha particle let the de-Broglie wavelength of the alpha be λ2{\lambda _2}, mass m2=4m1{m_2} = 4{m_1} (i.e. mass of alpha particle is four times the mass of the proton) and kinetic energy K.E = 2eV, where (2e) is the charge on alpha and v is the velocity of the alpha same as proton by which it is moving so from the equation (4) we have,
λ2=h2(4m1)2eV\Rightarrow {\lambda _2} = \dfrac{h}{{\sqrt {2\left( {4{m_1}} \right)2eV} }}.................... (6)
Now divide equation (5) by equation (6) we have,
λ1λ2=h2m1eVh2(4m1)2eV\Rightarrow \dfrac{{{\lambda _1}}}{{{\lambda _2}}} = \dfrac{{\dfrac{h}{{\sqrt {2{m_1}eV} }}}}{{\dfrac{h}{{\sqrt {2\left( {4{m_1}} \right)2eV} }}}}
Now simplify this we have,
λ1λ2=81=22\Rightarrow \dfrac{{{\lambda _1}}}{{{\lambda _2}}} = \dfrac{{\sqrt 8 }}{1} = 2\sqrt 2
So this is the required ratio of the corresponding de-Broglie wavelengths.
So this is the required answer.
Hence option (A) is the correct answer.

Note – In general an alpha particle is composed of two protons, two neutrons and is somewhat identical to a helium-4 atom. It can be produced by alpha decomposition or alpha decay of radioactive compounds. A proton is a subatomic particle. The trick point here was that the mass of the alpha particle is four times the mass of the proton.