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If your body develops a charge of -19 μC (microcoulombs), how many excess electrons has it acquired?

User Kerith
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2 Answers

4 votes

1e \ \ \ \ \ \ \rightarrow \ \ \ \ \ \ -1,6*10^(-19)C\\ x \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \rightarrow \ \ \ \ \ \ -19*10^(-6)C\\\\ x = (-19*10^(-6)C*1e)/(-1,6*10^(-19)C)=11,875*10^(13)e=1,1875*10^(14)e
User Jake Toronto
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1 vote

Answer : The number of electrons it acquired is,
11.875* 10^(13) electrons

Solution : Given,

Total charge =
-19\mu C=-19* 10^(-6)C
(1\mu C=10^(-6)C)

Charge on one electron =
-1.60* 10^(-19)C

Formula used :


\text{Number of electrons}=\frac{\text{Total charge}}{\text{Charge on one electron}}

Now put all the given values in this formula, we get the number of electrons.


\text{Number of electrons}=\frac{\text{Total charge}}{\text{Charge on one electron}}=(-19* 10^(-6)C)/(-1.60* 10^(-19)C)=11.875* 10^(13)electrons

Therefore, the number of electrons it acquired is,
11.875* 10^(13) electrons.

User Goalie
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8.3k points