Find Distance of Car, given Rest-Energy

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The discussion revolves around calculating the distance a car could travel using the energy from an aspirin tablet compared to gasoline. The energy produced by one gallon of gasoline is approximately 1.01×10^8 J, allowing a car to travel 18.2 miles. By converting the mass of an aspirin tablet (332 mg) into energy using the equation E=mc^2, the calculated energy is about 2.988×10^13 J. This leads to a theoretical distance of approximately 5.38 million miles for the car on aspirin, highlighting the vast difference in energy density. The conversation humorously reflects on the impracticality of using aspirin as a fuel source.
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Homework Statement


Suppose one gallon of gasoline produces 1.01×108 J of energy, and this energy is sufficient to operate a car for 18.2 miles. An aspirin tablet has a mass of 332 mg. If the aspirin could be converted completely into thermal energy, how many miles could the car go on a single tablet?

Homework Equations





The Attempt at a Solution



1 gallon of gas= (1.01E8) J
Distance of car(on gas)= 18.2 miles
Mass(aspirin)= 332 mg
Looking for
Distance of car(on asprin)=?


I converted the mass from grams to kilograms.
332mg = (332E-3)g = (332E-6)kg

*After this I'm not sure if I'm doing the right thing.*
The problem says "converted completely into thermal energy" so I'm assuming that this means I need to find the rest energy.
Erest=mc^2 [m=mass in kg; c=speed of light=(3E8)m/s]
=(332E-6)(3E8)^2
=(332E-6)(9E16)
=(2.988E13) J​

I then set up the energy of gas, distance on gas and the energy I found abvoe of the asprin, to solve for distance on asprin?
(distance of gas)/(energy of gas)=(distance of aspirin)/(energy of aspirin)
=(18.2 miles)/((1.01E8)J)=(?distace of asprin?)/((2.988E13)J)
=[(18.2)(2.988E13)]/(1.01E8)
=(5.43816E14)/(1.01E8)
=5384316.832 miles = (5.38E6) miles​

However that answer is incorrect and I'm not sure if I am even using the right formulas for this problem.

Any help would be greatly appreciated!
 
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is the answer 0.001242742 miles?
im not a guru btw
 
The correct answer is (5.38E6)mi. My calculations were correct, I just had my units of measurement wrong.
 
Hi blue_lilly. I'm pleased that the physics forums was able to help you to solve your problem on this occasion. :smile:
 
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errr so a gallon of gas get you 18 miles and an aspirin 5.38*10^6 miles ?

i guess we been using the wrong fuel all this time...
 
Patolord said:
errr so a gallon of gas get you 18 miles and an aspirin 5.38*10^6 miles ?

i guess we been using the wrong fuel all this time...

If only it really worked like that, we would saving a lot of money. C:
 
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