Chemistry, asked by kcgmailcom7550, 11 months ago

For which specific charge is independent of the nature of the gas

Answers

Answered by Varshaposa
2

Explanation:

the cathode rays are nothing but flow of elactrons the electrons of every atom is same

Answered by rakeshmohan73
0

Specific charge is negative for Cathode Rays

Cathode rays are autonomous.

In vacuum tubes, there are electron streams known as cathode rays (also called an electron beam or an e-beam). When a voltage is given to an evacuated glass tube with two electrodes, it is discovered that the glass next to the negative electrode lights due to the electrons released from the cathode. The earliest recordings of electrons as cathode ray components. A focused beam of electrons in cathode ray tubes (CRTs) that has been deflected by electric or magnetic forces produces the image on a traditional television.

independent of the type of gas atoms that are present inside the discharge tube's cathode, anode, or both.

Since cathode ray particles are exclusively electrons and are thus unaffected by the nature of the cathode, anode, or gas atoms present inside the discharge tube, it follows from the explanation above that their specific charge is negative, which is a universal constant.

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