Finding capacitence, used C = (EoA)/d, but didn't work

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The discussion revolves around calculating the capacitance of a parallel-plate capacitor with given dimensions and voltage. The formula used, C = (EoA)/d, was initially applied incorrectly due to confusion over area conversion from cm² to m². Participants clarified that the area should be converted to square meters, resulting in 0.0038 m², not 0.38 m². The correct capacitance value in picofarads (pF) was confirmed to be 1680 pF after proper conversion. The thread highlights the importance of accurate unit conversion in capacitor calculations.
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This seems like a plug n' chug problem but i missed it somehow..
A parallel-plate air-filled capacitor having area 38 cm2 and plate spacing 2.0 mm is charged to a potential difference of 450 V. Find the following values.

(a) the capacitance
wrong check mark pF
(b) the magnitude of the charge on each plate
nC
(c) the stored energy
µJ
(d) the electric field between the plates
V/m
(e) the energy density between the plates
J/m3

So i used C = (EoA)/d
A = .38
V = 450
d = .002m
C = [(8.85e-12)(.38)]/.002
C = 1.68e-9, but the want it in pF, p is e-12, so i moved the decimal over to amek it 1680pF, but it was still wrong, did i mess up converting it from e-9 to e-12?
 
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38 cm^2 = .0038 m^2
 
hm...1 meter = 100 centimeters
38cm/100cm = .38m
 
Area is NOT measured in "cm", but in cm x cm .
as in 10cm x 3.8 cm ... Convert both of them!
 
I know area is m^2, not m, or cm^2, not cm...
The problem already gives me the Area, so its already cm^2:
38 cm^2, so i want to conver that into meters, so .38 m^2. 2.0mm is the distance, i don't square that also.
 
38 \, cm^2 = 38 \, cm^2 * \frac{1 \, m}{100 \, cm}* \frac{1 \, m}{100 \, cm} = 38*10^{-4} \, m^2 = .0038 \, m^2
 
ohhhh my bad, sorry I'm slow hah, thanks guys!
 
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