A protozoan has 9.6E16 protons and a net charge of 0.35 pC. A ) how many...
6. An amoeba has 1.00× 10 16 protons and a net charge of 0.300 pC. (a) How many fewer electrons are there than protons? (b) If you paired them up, what fraction of the protons would have no electrons?
An amoeba has 1.40x1016 protons and a net charge of 0.300 PC. (Be careful of rounding errors; keep at least 4 places of decimal until your final calculation!) (a) Calculate the number of electrons that is in the amoeba. (b) If you paired them up, what fraction of the protons would have no electrons?
DETAILS M An amoeba has 1.40x1016 protons and a net charge of 0.480 PC. (Be careful of rounding errors; keep at least 4 places of decimal until your final calcuation!) (a) Calculate the number of electrons that is in the amoeba. (b) If you paired them up, what fraction of the protons would have no electrons?
amoeba has 2.00×1016 protons and an unknown number of electrons. The amoeba has a e charge of 1.6 x103 C. (a) How many fewer electrons are there than protons? (b) If you paired them up, what fraction of the protons would have no electrons? 12. An a) 1.00x1016 b) 50%
An amoeba has 6.989e+16 protons and a net charge of 0.649 pC. How many fewer electrons are there than protons?
An amoeba has 1.13×1016 protons and a net charge of 2.65×10-12 C. If you paired up its protons and electrons, what fraction of the protons would have no electrons? If possible give a detailed step by step explanation on how to get to the answer for this!
A piece of plastic has a net charge of +2.00 μC. How many fewer electrons than protons does this piece of plastic have? (e = 1.60 × 10-19 C)
A 52.8 g ball of copper has a net charge of 2.7 µC. What fraction of the copper's electrons have been removed? (Each copper atom has 29 protons, and copper has an atomic mass of 63.5.) What is the charge on the sphere contributed by protons? How many total protons are there?
1. Charge (2 pts each part) NOTE: You can find conversion factors in lecture notes and in your text. Your answer should have the correct number of sig figs! a) Common static electricity involves charges ranging from nanocoulombs to microcoulombs. How many electrons are needed to form a charge of -3.4nC? b) Suppose a lightning bolt moves 35.4 C of charge. How many fundamental units of charge eis this? c) Protons and neutrons are made up of combinations of two...
based on the charge, Q=2.182 x 10^-7, how many net electrons/protons does this charge correspond to?