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Chemistry
Question about the quotient of the charge and mass of an electron
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[QUOTE="mcastillo356, post: 6339430, member: 506793"] Hello, Borek, I knew nothing except the quote I mentioned in my first post. I had to start asking something as fuzzy as you see. I am attending a course to access university for those aged more than 45. Afterwards I've done this: the elementary charge [tex]e[/tex] is the modulus of the charge of the electron and the proton, which is [tex]1,602\times{10^{-19}}\;C[/tex]; [tex]m_{proton}=1,673\times{10^{-27}}\;kg[/tex]; [tex]m_{electron}=9,109\times{10^{-31}}\;kg[/tex] I've equated proton to hydrogen ion, and I've called it [tex]H^+[/tex], and I've arranged this: [tex]\dfrac{e}{m_e}>\dfrac{H^{+}}{m_{H^{+}}}\cdot{1000}[/tex] And that's all [/QUOTE]
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Question about the quotient of the charge and mass of an electron
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