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An electrically isolated object is electrically neutral. What is the charge on the object if you remove three electrons?

User Netgirlk
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1 Answer

2 votes

Answer:


+4.8\cdot 10^(-19)C

Step-by-step explanation:

The initial charge of the object is zero, since the object is neutral:

Q = 0

When we remove three electrons, we remove a charge of:


q' = 3 \cdot q_e

where


q_e = 1.6\cdot 10^(-19)C is the charge of one electron. Substituting,


q'=3 \cdot 1.6\cdot 10^(-19)C=-4.8\cdot 10^(-19) C

So, the final charge on the initially neutral object will be


q=Q-q' = 0 - (-4.8\cdot 10^(-19) C)=+4.8\cdot 10^(-19)C

User Oscar Nieto
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