QUESTION IMAGE
Question
- (3) if a nuclear reaction produces 1.75 gigajoules of energy, what was the mass - defect in milligrams?
Step1: Recall Einstein's mass - energy equivalence formula
$E = mc^{2}$, where $E$ is energy, $m$ is mass, and $c = 3\times10^{8}\ m/s$. We need to solve for $m$, so $m=\frac{E}{c^{2}}$.
Step2: Convert the energy to SI units
Given $E = 1.75\ GJ=1.75\times 10^{9}\ J$.
Step3: Calculate the mass
$m=\frac{1.75\times 10^{9}\ J}{(3\times 10^{8}\ m/s)^{2}}=\frac{1.75\times 10^{9}}{9\times 10^{16}}\ kg$.
$m=\frac{1.75}{9}\times10^{-7}\ kg$.
Step4: Convert the mass to milligrams
Since $1\ kg = 10^{6}\ mg$, then $m=\frac{1.75}{9}\times10^{-7}\times10^{6}\ mg=\frac{1.75}{9}\times10^{- 1}\ mg\approx0.0194\ mg$.
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$0.0194\ mg$