A charged particle is injected into a uniform magnetic field such that its velocity vector is perpendicular to the magnetic field vector. Ignoring the particle's weight, the particle will follow a circular path.
Option D
Step-by-step explanation:
Magnetic force causes charged particles to move in spiral paths. The Particle accelerators keep the protons to follow circular paths when it is in the magnetic field. Velocity has a change in direction but magnitude remains the same when this condition exists.
The magnetic force exerted on the charged particle is given by the formula:

where
q is the charge
v is the velocity of the particle
B is the magnetic field
is the angle
In this problem, the velocity is perpendicular to the magnetic field vector, hence
=
and sin
=sin 90 degree = 1.
So applying the formula,
the force is simply

Also, the force is perpendicular to both B and v and so according to the right-hand rule, we have:
- a force that is always perpendicular to the velocity, v
- a force which is constant in magnitude (because the magnitude of v or B does not change)
This means that the force acts as a centripetal force, so it will keep the charged particle in a uniform circular motion.