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In an experiment Erin holds two objects. Object A has a net charge of –4.81 × 10–7 C, and object B has a net charge of 6.41 × 10–7 C. She touches the objects together.

(a) Roughly how many more electrons are there than protons in object A before the two objects come in contact?

(b) After Erin touches the objects together, about 5.00 × 1011 electrons transfer from object A to object B. What is the new net charge on object B?

User Taysia
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1 Answer

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a) object A has
3.0\cdot 10^(12) electrons more than protons

b)
+5.61\cdot 10^(-7) C

Step-by-step explanation:

a)

Electrons are negatively charged particles, so they have a charge of


q_e =-e= -1.6\cdot 10^(-19)C

On the other hand, protons are positively charged particles, so they have a charge of


q_p =+e=+1.6\cdot 10^(-19)C

Therefore, the net charge of an object can be written as


Q=N_p q_p + N_e q_e=e(N_p-N_e)

where


N_p is the number of protons


N_e is the number of electrons

So the equation can be rewritten as


N_p - N_e = (Q)/(e)

Which gives the difference between number of protons and number of electrons.

Here, object A has a charge of


Q=-4.81\cdot 10^(-7)C

Therefore,


N_p-N_e=(-4.81\cdot 10^(-7))/(1.6\cdot 10^(-19))=-3.0\cdot 10^(12)

Which means that object A has
3.0\cdot 10^(12) electrons more than protons.

b)

When Erin touches the objects together, the number of electrons transferred from object A to object B is


N_e' = 5.0\cdot 10^(11)

The charge corresponding to these electrons transferred is


Q'=N_e' (-e)=(5.0\cdot 10^(11))(-1.6\cdot 10^(-19))=-8\cdot 10^(-8) C

The initial charge on object B was


Q_B=+6.41\cdot 10^(-7)C

This means that the final charge on object B after the electrons are transferred will be:


Q=Q_B+Q'=+6.41\cdot 10^(-7)+(-8\cdot 10^(-8))=+5.61\cdot 10^(-7) C

User CuSK
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