Paper 1, Section II, 35D

Electrodynamics
Part II, 2017

In some inertial reference frame SS, there is a uniform electric field E\mathbf{E} directed along the positive yy-direction and a uniform magnetic field B\mathbf{B} directed along the positive zz direction. The magnitudes of the fields are EE and BB, respectively, with E<cBE<c B. Show that it is possible to find a reference frame in which the electric field vanishes, and determine the relative speed βc\beta c of the two frames and the magnitude of the magnetic field in the new frame.

[Hint: You may assume that under a standard Lorentz boost with speed v=βv=\beta c along the xx-direction, the electric and magnetic field components transform as

(ExEyEz)=(Exγ(β)(EyvBz)γ(β)(Ez+vBy))and(BxByBz)=(Bxγ(β)(By+vEz/c2)γ(β)(BzvEy/c2)),\left(\begin{array}{c} E_{x}^{\prime} \\ E_{y}^{\prime} \\ E_{z}^{\prime} \end{array}\right)=\left(\begin{array}{c} E_{x} \\ \gamma(\beta)\left(E_{y}-v B_{z}\right) \\ \gamma(\beta)\left(E_{z}+v B_{y}\right) \end{array}\right) \quad a n d \quad\left(\begin{array}{c} B_{x}^{\prime} \\ B_{y}^{\prime} \\ B_{z}^{\prime} \end{array}\right)=\left(\begin{array}{c} B_{x} \\ \gamma(\beta)\left(B_{y}+v E_{z} / c^{2}\right) \\ \gamma(\beta)\left(B_{z}-v E_{y} / c^{2}\right) \end{array}\right),

where the Lorentz factor γ(β)=(1β2)1/2\gamma(\beta)=\left(1-\beta^{2}\right)^{-1 / 2}.]

A point particle of mass mm and charge qq moves relativistically under the influence of the fields E\mathbf{E} and B\mathbf{B}. The motion is in the plane z=0z=0. By considering the motion in the reference frame in which the electric field vanishes, or otherwise, show that, with a suitable choice of origin, the worldline of the particle has components in the frame SS of the form

ct(τ)=γ(u/c)γ(β)[cτ+βuωsinωτ]x(τ)=γ(u/c)γ(β)[βcτ+uωsinωτ]y(τ)=uγ(u/c)ωcosωτ\begin{aligned} &c t(\tau)=\gamma(u / c) \gamma(\beta)\left[c \tau+\frac{\beta u}{\omega} \sin \omega \tau\right] \\ &x(\tau)=\gamma(u / c) \gamma(\beta)\left[\beta c \tau+\frac{u}{\omega} \sin \omega \tau\right] \\ &y(\tau)=\frac{u \gamma(u / c)}{\omega} \cos \omega \tau \end{aligned}

Here, uu is a constant speed with Lorentz factor γ(u/c),τ\gamma(u / c), \tau is the particle's proper time, and ω\omega is a frequency that you should determine.

Using dimensionless coordinates,

x~=ωuγ(u/c)x and y~=ωuγ(u/c)y\tilde{x}=\frac{\omega}{u \gamma(u / c)} x \quad \text { and } \quad \tilde{y}=\frac{\omega}{u \gamma(u / c)} y

sketch the trajectory of the particle in the (x~,y~)(\tilde{x}, \tilde{y})-plane in the limiting cases 2πβu/c2 \pi \beta \ll u / c and 2πβu/c2 \pi \beta \gg u / c.