I am confused. Could someone kindly explain what's going on in this question?
A particle of mass $m$ and charge $e$ moves in the $x,y-$ plane. There is a constant magnetic field $B$ that points in the $z$ direction. Initially the particle has energy $\gamma m$ in the rest frame of the observer. After a time elapse of $\Delta t$, the observed energy is $\gamma' m$ (again in the rest frame of the observer). How are $\gamma,\gamma',t$ related?
Some thoughts:
Since we have an accelerated charge, energy is radiated. Since the question does not specify that the motion is non-relativistic, I shall use the relativistic equations.
Larmor's formula:
$$P=\frac{\mu_0 q^2}{6\pi m^2}\frac{dp^a}{d\tau}\frac{dp_a}{d\tau}$$
To get $\frac{dp^a}{d\tau}$ I need the equation of motion: $$\frac{dp^a}{d\tau}=eF^a{}_b\frac{dx^b}{d\tau}=\frac{e}{m}F^a{}_bp^b$$ where $$F^a{}_b=\begin{pmatrix}0&0&0&0\\ 0 &0& B&0\\0 &-B& 0&0\\0&0&0&0\end{pmatrix}$$ This gives 4 coupled ODEs. Actually the first 2 are trivial such that $$p_0=p_{0, init}\\p_4=p_{4,init} $$ and $$\frac{dp_1}{d\tau}=\frac{qB}{m}p_2\\ \frac{dp_2}{d\tau}=-\frac{qB}{m}p_1$$
But then doesn't $$p_0=p_{0, init}=\gamma m$$ say that the energy is conserved? It is also not physically surprising if it were since the magnetic field induces a force perpendicular to the velocity of the particle, therefore does no work on it.
What's gone wrong?
[Update 1] With Mike's and Michael's help, I have proceeded to figured out how to do it for the non-relativistic case (but I'm not very sure how to extend it to the relativistic case :-/ ) -- if I'm not mistaken, the NR case should be something of the following: $$F=e \vec v\times \vec B$$ Assuming circular motion and the magnetic field being perpendicular to the plane of motion, $$r=\frac{mv_{init}}{eB}$$ Therefore acceleration is $$a=\frac{v^2}{r}$$ Then I can substitute it into Larmor's formula and so on. How do I generalize it to the relativistic case?
[Update 2] Do I simply add a $\gamma$ factor in front of the $v$'s?