Question with large number?electron charge?

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The electric charge of an electron is -1.6 x 10^-19 C, and the force between two electrons separated by one meter can be calculated using Coulomb's law. The calculations involve multiplying the charges and applying the constant K, resulting in a force of approximately 2.3 x 10^-28 N. Since both charges are negative, the force is repulsive, confirming that like charges repel each other. Understanding the addition of exponents when multiplying charges is crucial for accurate calculations.
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Question with large number?electron charge?

Homework Statement



The electric charge of an electron is -1.6 x 10^-19 C. What is the force exerted between two electrons separated by one meter? Is it attractive or repulsive?

Homework Equations



F= K Q1Q2 / D^2

The Attempt at a Solution



Im horrible with large numbers and especially at negative exponents...so this is a guess

K = 9x 10^9 N x m^2/c^2

Q1 = -1.6 x 10^-19 C
Q2 = -1.6 x 10^-19 C
D= 1 m


F= 9 x 10 ^9 N x m^2 X ( -1.6x 10 ^-19 C x -1.6x 10 ^-19 C / 1^2 m)

F= 9 x 10 ^9 N x m X (3.2 x 10^19 C^2 )
F= 28.8 x 10^28 NxmxC^2...is the answer i got...

I know i am completely off but how can i do this ...this is basically math but I am just not with well large numbers...
 
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F= 9 x 10 ^9 N x m X (3.2 x 10^19 C^2 )
This step is wrong. -1.6x10^-19 X -1.6x10^-19 = ?
 


rl.bhat said:
F= 9 x 10 ^9 N x m X (2.56 x 10^19 C^2 )
This step is wrong. -1.6x10^-19 X -1.6x10^-19 = ?

Thats the thing i don't know...do you add the exponents together??

2.56 x 10^-38?

1.6 x 1.6 = 2.56 but what about the 10^-19? do i add them or does it stay the same?

Actually now i got 2.6 x 10 ^-38...by multiplying both
 
Last edited:


graphicer89 said:
Thats the thing i don't know...do you add the exponents together??

2.56 x 10^-38?


Actually now i got 2.6 x 10 ^-38...by multiplying both
This is correct.
 


rl.bhat said:
This is correct.

Ok so after i have 2.6 x 10^-38 is it C^2?
 


Well let me put what i have... F=9 x 10^9 N x m^2/c^2 X( 2.6 x 10^-38 c^2 /1 m^2)

that is what i have...do i cancel out the m^2 and c^2? from both sides? so that only the N is remaining?
 


graphicer89 said:
Well let me put what i have... F=9 x 10^9 N x m^2/c^2 X( 2.6 x 10^-38 c^2 /1 m^2)

that is what i have...do i cancel out the m^2 and c^2? from both sides? so that only the N is remaining?
Yes. Force should be in N.
 


rl.bhat said:
Yes. Force should be in N.

Cool so if i did my calculations right...i got 2.3 x 10^-28 N am i close or am i really off? but i think this force is repulsive no? because its a positive number ...or is it attractive?
 
  • #10


graphicer89 said:
Cool so if i did my calculations right...i got 2.3 x 10^-28 N am i close or am i really off? but i think this force is repulsive no? because its a positive number ...or is it attractive?
Like charges repel each other.
 
  • #11


rl.bhat said:
Like charges repel each other.

Exactly. The equation gives the magnitude of the force. Use the opposites attract / likes repel rule to figure out the direction.
 
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