1. Account for the need for high voltages and low gas pressures in cathode ray tubes.
2. Contrast the particle movements in a cathode ray tube containing sodium vapour at low and very low pressures.
3. Propose arguments in support of the view that cathode rays were high velocity particles.
for question 1, does the high voltage allow cathode rays to flow from the cathode to anode and completes the circuit. low gas pressures allow the electrons to accelerate to high speeds to the anode therefore minimising particle collisions and hence less striations appear in the tube?
thanks!
2. Contrast the particle movements in a cathode ray tube containing sodium vapour at low and very low pressures.
3. Propose arguments in support of the view that cathode rays were high velocity particles.
for question 1, does the high voltage allow cathode rays to flow from the cathode to anode and completes the circuit. low gas pressures allow the electrons to accelerate to high speeds to the anode therefore minimising particle collisions and hence less striations appear in the tube?
thanks!