Four Protons Are Fused Into An Alpha Particle, Energy Released

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on the fusion of four protons into an alpha particle and the energy released during this process. A user initially miscalculated the energy by incorrectly multiplying by c², which was later corrected. The calculations involve the binding energy of the particles and the conversion of released energy into electrical power for a hypothetical fusion power plant. The final correct answer for the number of alpha particles needed to be fused per second is approximately 1.87 x 10²¹. The conversation emphasizes the importance of accurate unit conversions and calculations in nuclear fusion scenarios.
breakingaway
Messages
8
Reaction score
0
(answered)Four Protons Are Fused Into Alpha Particle, Energy Released

Answered: I wasn't supposed to multiply by c2. Thank you ehild

I apologize in advance if I posted this in an incorrect format or in the wrong section. I read the rules and I believe this is the correct format/place.

Homework Statement


The proton-proton reaction that takes place in the Sun has the net effect of converting four protons (Mp= 1.007825 u) into alpha particles (Ma= 4.002603 u). The resulting "released" energy is shared between the kinetic energy of the alpha particles, positrons, neutrinos and gamma ray photons. Assume we could eventually design a 1.00 GW (billion watt) fusion power plant using this same reaction. Also assume that 12.5% of the "released" energy (kinetic + photon) can be converted into electrical power.
How many alpha particles would need to be fused in the reactor every second?


Homework Equations


binding energy:
[STRIKE]Eb=c2 * (Mnucleons-Mparticle)*931.494MeV[/STRIKE]
Eb=(Mnucleons-Mparticle)*931.494MeV/u


The Attempt at a Solution


Eb = c2 * (4*Mp-Ma)=2.2058*1024eV =3.85408*105j

Eb*12.5% = 4.8115*104j

1*109W / Eb = 2.0783*104s-1

The correct answer is: 1.87*1021

Thank you in advance for any help anybody can provide.
 
Last edited:
Physics news on Phys.org
In what units of mass have you calculated with? ehild
 
ehild said:
In what units of mass have you calculated with? ehild

For the problem the mass of a proton(1.007825u) and alpha particle(4.002603u) is given in atomic mass units(u=931.494MeV). I converted to joules before doing any calculations involving power.
 
Why did you multiplied energy by c^2?

ehild
 
ehild said:
Why did you multiplied energy by c^2?

ehild

Well, I think you just found my mistake.

Just crunched the number without the c^2 and it came out correct.

Thank you.
 
Yes, taking the proton mass in kg-s, m(proton)c2/(1.6 10-19(J/eV) )≈931 MeV.

ehild
 
Thread 'Voltmeter readings for this circuit with switches'
TL;DR Summary: I would like to know the voltmeter readings on the two resistors separately in the picture in the following cases , When one of the keys is closed When both of them are opened (Knowing that the battery has negligible internal resistance) My thoughts for the first case , one of them must be 12 volt while the other is 0 The second case we'll I think both voltmeter readings should be 12 volt since they are both parallel to the battery and they involve the key within what the...
Thread 'Trying to understand the logic behind adding vectors with an angle between them'
My initial calculation was to subtract V1 from V2 to show that from the perspective of the second aircraft the first one is -300km/h. So i checked with ChatGPT and it said I cant just subtract them because I have an angle between them. So I dont understand the reasoning of it. Like why should a velocity be dependent on an angle? I was thinking about how it would look like if the planes where parallel to each other, and then how it look like if one is turning away and I dont see it. Since...
Back
Top