Electric and Gravitational Forces & Fields

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I'm getting pretty frustrated with this equation, and I'm not sure what I'm really doing. I've gone to the teacher for help, but as soon as I left school and came home, I've drawn a blank about what he told me..

"At a point in Earth's atmosphere, the electric field is 150 N/C downward and the gravitational field is 9.80 N/kg downward.

a) Determine the electric force on a proton (p+) placed at this point.

b) Determine the gravitational force on the proton at this point. The proton has a mass of 1.67 x 10-27 kg."


For a), I'm pretty sure you use the formula:
E = Fe/q, and then manipulate it to find Fe, right?

I tried doing this:
Fe = q * E
Fe = 9.80 N/kg * 150 N/C

I get Fe = 1470 N, when in the back of the textbook it says I should get 2.40 x 10-17 N
So I'm not getting the answer that it says in the textbook. I was wondering if I did something wrong with 'q', because isn't that the charge, which should be in coulombs? Am I supposed to use the gravitational field and the mass of the proton to find the charge?

I also tried this:
Fe = (1.67 x 10-27 * 9.80 N/kg) * 150 N/C
and I got Fe = 2.50 x 10-24 N
Still the wrong answer.
Maybe I'm entering it wrong into my calculator?

As for b), I was told to use:
g = Fg/m, then manipulate it to this:
Fg = mg
Fg = 1.67 x 10-27 * 9.80 N/kg

Fg = 1.64 x 10-26 N
which is right, so I don't really know why I typed this all down! Haha
 
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Fe = q * E
Fe = 9.80 N/kg * 150 N/C
q here is charge. What is the charge of a proton? Don't worry about "g" for this part of the question. It doesn't have anything to do with the electric force.
 
hage567 said:
q here is charge. What is the charge of a proton? Don't worry about "g" for this part of the question. It doesn't have anything to do with the electric force.

Oh, yeah. So instead of 1.67 x 10-27 N/kg, I use 1.60 x 10-19 C.

Fe = 1.60 x 10-19 C * 150 N/C
Fe = 2.40 x 10-17 N

Thanks! I get so frustrated, I seem to just miss one little thing that screws up the answer! I can't believe I did that..