34.1k views
3 votes
If you wish to take a picture of a bullet traveling at 500 m/s, then a very brief flash of light produced by an RC discharge through a flash tube can limit blurring. Assuming 1.00 mm of motion during one RC constant is acceptable, and given that the flash is driven by a 503 µF capacitor, what is the resistance in the flash tube?

User Rgiar
by
6.9k points

2 Answers

1 vote

Answer:


R=3.98* 10^(-3) ohm

Step-by-step explanation:

We are given that

Speed of bullet=500 m/s

Distance during one RC time constant=d=1 mm=
1* 10^(-3) m

Capacitance=
503\mu F=503* 10^(-6) F

We have to find the resistance in the flash tube.


\tau=(d)/(v)=(1* 10^(-3))/(500)


\tau=2* 10^(-6) s


\tau =RC


R=(\tau)/(C)=(2* 10^(-6))/(503* 10^(-6))


R=3.98* 10^(-3) ohm

Hence, the resistance in the flash tube=
3.98* 10^(-3) ohm

User SidR
by
6.4k points
3 votes

Answer:

Resistance in the flash tube,
R=3.97* 10^(-3)\ \Omega

Step-by-step explanation:

It is given that,

Speed of the bullet, v = 500 m/s

Distance between one RC constant, d = 1 mm = 0.001 m

Capacitance,
C=503\ \mu F=503* 10^(-6)\ F

The time constant of RC circuit is given by :


\tau=RC

R is the resistance in the flash tube


R=(\tau)/(C)..........(1)

Speed of the bullet is given by total distance divided by total time taken as :


v=(d)/(\tau)


\tau=(d)/(v)


\tau=(0.001)/(500)


\tau=0.000002\ s

Equation (1) becomes :


R=(0.000002)/(503* 10^(-6))


R=3.97* 10^(-3)\ \Omega

So, the resistance in the flash tube is
3.97* 10^(-3)\ \Omega. Hence, this is the required solution.

User TheDazzler
by
7.4k points