An electron oscillates one thousand million times per second along the z-axis with a displacement z(t)=sin(ωt) mm. What is the value of the electric fie

ld E(t) produced at a distance r of ten meters (x=10m, y=0, z=0)?

The Feynman Lectures :

Ez(x)=kq/rc^2 (a(t-x/c)) where a is the acceleration of the charge, an c is the speed of light, k=1/4PIepislion)

acceleration:
z=sin(wt)
v=wcos(wt)
a=w^2sin(wt) in MKS, a=.001w^2sinwt m/s^2
c look it up.
q is charge on one electron, in coulombs.

Is this enough?

I don't know how can I calculate the acceleration if I don't have the time, or it must depend on t? The whole Ez(x) equation?

Thanks

You think this is right?

imgur(dot)com/iijkycf(dot)jpg

Thank you

To find the value of the electric field E(t) produced at distance r = 10 meters (x = 10m, y = 0, z = 0), we can use Coulomb's law.

Coulomb's law states that the electric field E at a point due to a charged particle is given by:

E = k * (q / r^2)

where k is the Coulomb's constant (k ≈ 9 × 10^9 Nm^2/C^2), q is the charge of the particle, and r is the distance from the charged particle to the point where the electric field is being calculated.

In this case, we are dealing with an electron, which has a charge of approximately -1.6 × 10^(-19) Coulombs.

Now, we need to determine the value of q, the charge of the electron, based on the given information about its motion. The displacement z(t) of the electron along the z-axis at time t is given by:

z(t) = sin(ωt) mm

where ω represents the angular frequency of the oscillation. The angular frequency ω can be calculated using the formula:

ω = 2πf

where f is the frequency of oscillation. In this case, the frequency is given as one thousand million times per second, which is equivalent to 10^9 Hz. Therefore:

ω = 2π * (10^9)
≈ 6.283 × 10^9 rad/s

Now, let's substitute the value of ω and the displacement z(t) into the equation to find the charge q:

z(t) = sin(ωt) mm

q = z(t) * (2 * 10^-3) * 1.6 × 10^(-19)
= sin(ωt) * (2 * 10^-3) * 1.6 × 10^(-19)

where (2 * 10^-3) is used to convert the displacement from mm to meters.

After calculating the value of q, we can find the electric field E(t) at distance r = 10 meters using Coulomb's law:

E(t) = k * (q / r^2)
= (9 × 10^9) * (q / (10^2))
≈ (9 × 10^9) * (q / 100)

Finally, you can substitute the calculated value of q into the equation to find the value of the electric field E(t) produced at distance r = 10 meters.