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/sci/ - Science & Math


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3025971 No.3025971 [Reply] [Original]

sup /sci/ I just had this thought in the shower:
We know that an electron is e- and a positron is e+


so what is e on its own? What is it made of? What is it? What does it do? Can it exist? Does it exist?


pic probably related

>> No.3025976

viral

>> No.3025979

about 2.72

>> No.3025981

There is no such thing as a neutral electron.

It hasn't been discovered, anyway, and I don't think there's any mathematical reason to predict its existence.

>> No.3025984

No. It's not on it's own.

>> No.3025988

It's the natural logarithm-base you moron.

>> No.3025989
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3025989

e is charge of an electron. e+ means its positive, e- means its negative. e is approximately 1.6*10^-19

read up on the subject before asking completely stupid question.

>> No.3025998

<span class="math">\frac{He}{H}=e[/spoiler]

>> No.3026000

>>3025998
That is, helium divided with hydrogen