you had stated that the more the positive charge the faster the electrons would travel but also said that the number of electrons per unit time dosen't change. If the electrons moved faster, how is the number number of electrons per unit time the same?
So I found the ans apparently the explanation is that the anode almost instantaneously captures the electrons and therefore basically take the time of travelling between the anode and cathode to be 0, hence the number released at the cathode Is constantly equal to the number relased
for reference this has been removed from 2022 syllabus but still very helpful!
can you confirm if this can still appear in exams? I couldn't find anything related to this in syllabus :(
This is still in the 2022 syllabus right?
nope
you had stated that the more the positive charge the faster the electrons would travel but also said that the number of electrons per unit time dosen't change.
If the electrons moved faster, how is the number number of electrons per unit time the same?
So I found the ans apparently the explanation is that the anode almost instantaneously captures the electrons and therefore basically take the time of travelling between the anode and cathode to be 0, hence the number released at the cathode Is constantly equal to the number relased
is it possible to get these notes?
is this still part of the syllabus?
no kashaf
Is this in 2022 syllabus?
its not mentioned in the 2022 syllabus so I guess not
is this in the 2025 syllabus?