Home
Class 12
PHYSICS
A neutral particle at rest at A decays i...

A neutral particle at rest at A decays into two charged particles of different mass. Which can be ignore any gravitational and electrostatic force?

A

B

C

D

Text Solution

Verified by Experts

The correct Answer is:
B
Promotional Banner

Topper's Solved these Questions

  • PHYSICS PART2

    FIITJEE|Exercise Section (I) : Subjective|4 Videos
  • PHYSICS PART2

    FIITJEE|Exercise Section (II) : MCQ|27 Videos
  • PHYSICS PART-III

    FIITJEE|Exercise NUMERICAL BASED QUESTIONS DECIMAL TYPE|11 Videos
  • ROTATIONAL MECHANICS

    FIITJEE|Exercise COMPREHENSION - IV|2 Videos

Similar Questions

Explore conceptually related problems

A neutral particle at rest in a magnetic field decays into two charged particles of different mass. The energy released goes into their kinetic energy. Then what can be the path of the particles. Neglect any interaction between the two charges.

Force on Charge Particle

Can gravitational force lie repulsive like electrostatic force?

A particle at rest suddenly disintegrates into two particles of equal masses which start moving. The two fragments will

Two particles , each of mass m and carrying charge Q , are separated by some distance. If they are in equilibrium under mutual gravitational and electrostatic force then Q//m (in C//kg) is of the order of

Consider a particle at rest which may decay into two (daughter) particles or into three (daughter) particles. Which of the following is // are true? (There are no external forces):

A neutral particle is at rest in a uniform magnetic field B . At time t = 0 it decays into two charged particles, each of mass m . (a) If the charge of one of the particles is +q , what is the charge of the other? (b) The two particles move off in separate paths, both of them lie in the plane perpendicular to B . At a later time, the particles collide. Express the time from decay until collision in terms of m, B and q .

Why is an atom neutral inspite of the presence of charged particles in it ?