Magnitude of electric force on a proton

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around calculating the electric force between two protons separated by 2.5 femtometers, using the formula Fe = K|q1||q2| / r². The calculated force is 37 N, with the charge of each proton being 1.6 x 10^-19 C. Clarification is provided that this value represents the charge of a proton, not an electron, although both have charges of equal magnitude but opposite signs. The confusion arises from the relationship between protons and electrons in neutral atoms, where their charges balance each other. Understanding these charge properties is essential for applying the electric force formula correctly.
Sox281212
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Homework Statement


Two protons are 2.5fm apart.
What is the magnitude of the electric force on one proton due to the other proton?

Homework Equations


Fe = K|q1||q2| / r2

The Attempt at a Solution


Fe = (9 x 109)x(1.6 x 10-19)2 / (2.5 x 10-15)2
Fe = 37 N

I got the answer but I don't understand why I am able to use e= 1.6 x 10-19 as q1 and q2? could someone explain? thanks
 
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Because both protons have this charge.
 
Sox281212 said:
I got the answer but I don't understand why I am able to use e= 1.6 x 10-19 as q1 and q2? could someone explain? thanks
You have two charges:
q1 = 1.6e-19C
q2 = 1.6e-19C
why wouldn't the formula F = kq1q2/r2 apply here?
 
Wait, I'm confused.. isn't 1.6 x 10^-19 the charge of an electron?! Oh wait, is it because charge of electron = charge of proton if its neutral?
 
Sox281212 said:
Wait, I'm confused.. isn't 1.6 x 10^-19 the charge of an electron?! Oh wait, is it because charge of electron = charge of proton if its neutral?

+1.6 x 10^-19 C is the charge of a proton. -1.6 x 10^-19 C is the charge of an electron. They are the same magnitude but of opposite sign. Also note that the unit is important, 1.6 x 10^-19 is not a charge, it is a number.
 
Thank you so much, that cleared things up :)
 
Sox281212 said:
Wait, I'm confused.. isn't 1.6 x 10^-19 the charge of an electron?! Oh wait, is it because charge of electron = charge of proton if its neutral?
Charge of electron = -charge of proton. The thing that's neutral is the atom, comprising electrons, equal number of protons yielding the "neutrality", plus possibly neutrons which have no charge. ( The exception is ions which do have a net charge. Example: add salt to water, you get mostly sodium and chlorine ions).
 
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