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

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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