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The number of electrons in a copper penny is approximately 10*10^23. How large would the force be on an object if it carried this charge and were repelled by an equal charge one meter away?

I am using don't panic volume 2. How do you do this problem step by step?

User Chelsie
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2 Answers

6 votes
The charge on the electron is 1.6x10^-19C. So, 10^24 of them will be a charge of 1.6x10^5C, F = q1xq2/[(4pi epsilon nought)r^2]
User Paul Kehrer
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1 vote

Answer:

The force of repulsion between charges will be 2.309 N.

Step-by-step explanation:

The number of electrons in a copper penny =N =
10* 10^(23)

Charge on an electron =
e=-1.602* 10^(-19) C

Total charge of the N electrons = Q


Q=N* e


Q=10* 10^(23)* 1.602* 10^(-19)C=-1.602* 10^(-5)C

The force be on an object if it carried this charge and were repelled by an equal charge one meter away.


Q=-1.602* 10^(-5)C


q=Q

Let the force of repulsion be F.

Distance between the Q and q charges = r =1 m


F=k(Qq)/(r^2) (Coulomb law)


F=9* 10^9 Nm^2/C^2* ((-1.602* 10^(-5) C)* (-1.602* 10^(-5) C))/((1m)^2)


F=2.309 N

The force of repulsion between charges will be 2.309 N.

User Sachin Muthumala
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6.4k points