Converting Energy to Mass: Understanding the Relationship Between MeV and kg

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around the conversion of energy to mass using the equation E = mc², specifically addressing the conversion of 1672 MeV to kilograms. The initial calculations led to confusion due to improper handling of units and the value of c. Participants clarified that 1672 MeV/c² is equivalent to 1672 MeV when considering energy directly, eliminating the need for further conversion. The error was identified as a misunderstanding of unit cancellation and the application of c² in the calculations. Ultimately, the correct mass conversion aligns with the understanding that mass in MeV/c² directly translates to energy in MeV.
Saibot
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Homework Statement
Convert 1672 MeV/c^2 to kg
Relevant Equations
E=mc^2
(1672 MeV/c^2) * c^2 = 1.505 * 10^20 MeV = 1.505 * 10^26 eV = 2.41 * 10^7 J

Since E = mc^2, m = E/c^2

Therefore, m = 2.41 * 10^7 / (3 * 10^8)^2 = 2.68 * 10^-10 kg

But the answer is 2.97 * 10^-27 kg

Help! What is wrong with my logic?
 
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##1~\text{eV} = 1.609 \times 10^{-19}~\text{J}##
eV is a unit of energy so eV/c2 is a unit of mass. Thus 1 J/c2 is kilograms. Conversely, if you multiply kilograms by c2 in (m/s)2, you get Joules.
Take it from there.
 
Indeed, but if I directly convert 1672 MeV/c^2 using the fundamental charge:

(1672 * 10^6 eV/c^2) * 1.609 J/eV, I get 2.68 * 10^-10 J/c^2. This is kilograms.

Same wrong answer. I'm missing something here. I have to divide again by c^2 and I have no idea why.
 
Saibot said:
(1672 MeV/c^2) * c^2 = 1.505 * 10^20 MeV
No. You haven't handled the conversion/units correctly. The 'c²'s (on the 'top' and the 'bottom') cancel, so the energy (in MeV) is 1672MeV.
 
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OK, so it was incorrect to replace the "unit" c with the actual "value" of c (3*10^8). Got it, thanks mate.
 
Saibot said:
(1672 * 10^6 eV/c^2) * 1.609 J/eV, I get 2.68 * 10^-10 J/c^2. This is kilograms.
Mind your units.

If ##~1~\text{eV} = 1.609 \times 10^{-19}~\text{J}##, ##~1~\text{J} = \frac{1}{1.609 \times 10^{-19}}~\text{eV}\implies 1~ \rm{J/eV}=6.21\times 10^{18}.##
 
Saibot said:
Therefore, m = 2.41 * 10^7 / (3 * 10^8)^2 = 2.68 * 10^-10 kg

But the answer is 2.97 * 10^-27 kg
You are off by a factor of ##\approx 9 \times 10^{16}##. This should give you a clue as to what you are doing wrong.
 
Saibot said:
OK, so it was incorrect to replace the "unit" c with the actual "value" of c (3*10^8). Got it, thanks mate.
It's ok to replace the "unit" c with its actual value. But you didn't do it everwhere. So you should have done this:

##1672 MeV/c^2 \times c^2##

##= 1672 \times \frac {MeV}{(3 \times 10^8 m/s)^2} \times (3 \times 10^8 m/s)^2##

##= 1672MeV##

Of course, all that work is unnecesary once you understand that a mass of ##X~ MeV/c^2## is equivalent (using ##E=mc^2##) to an energy of ##X ~MeV##.
 
Understood. Thanks so much :)
 
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