Chemistry, asked by mantosh67, 11 months ago

Cathode rays are flow of

Answers

Answered by adisha28
3

The cathode is a negatively-charged conductor, and the anode is a positively-charged conductor. Electrons, which have a negative charge, flow off the cathode and are attracted towards the anode. A small hole in the anode allows some electrons to pass through it, creating a beam of electrons.

Answered by marishthangaraj
0

Cathode rays are flow of electrons which have a negative charge

Explanation:

  • Cathode rays are produced inside a vacuum tube using a positively charged element called “cathode” on the neck end of the tube and a High voltage negatively charged “anode” at the opposite face end of the tube.
  • When the cathode element is heated, it produces positively charged ions, which are attracted by the high voltage negative potential existing on the anode’s coated face plate.
  • As the electron beams travel between the cathode and the anode plate, they passes in between two other charge bodies called deflection plates which forces the beams to move and be deflected depending on how much the deflection plates are energized /charged. In a sense the deflection plates influence the ions to move in certain directions before they hit the phosphor coated anode.
  • The cathode to anode can be the equivalent of horizontal sweeps, while the deflection plates causes the vertical sweep,in my perspective. Like painting the x-y axis onto the face of the tube.

Learn more about cathode rays

How does cathode rays differ from the anode rays.

https://brainly.in/question/1399141

properties of cathode rays and anode rays.

https://brainly.in/question/3995404

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