I think you're confused. A neutron has no charge. An atom, however, is made up of negatively charged Electrons, Positively charged Protons, and No-charge Neutrons.
A neutron carries no electric charge, a proton carries a positive charge and an electron carries a negative charge.
electron-negative, proton-positive, neutron-neutral
No. That would be called an ion.
A Proton has a positive charge.A Electron has a negative charge.A Neutron has no charge.
The neutron.
positive: proton negative: electron neutral: neutron
There are three primary subatomic particles: the neutron, the electron and the proton. The electron is negatively charged, the proton is positively charged and the neutron has no charge.
The neutrons are the part of the atom that carry no electric charge. They are found in the nucleus. the protons carry a positive charge and the electrons carry a negative charge.
A neutron has no electric charge. However, it is made up of smaller particles (quarks), which have both positive and negative charges. The total sum of all these charges, in the case of a neutron, is zero.
Neutron is neutral, proton is positive, electron is negative.
electron-negative, proton-positive, neutron-neutral
There is no such thing as a "positive neutron" or a "negative neutron". A neutron is always neutral.
Protons : Positive unit chargeElectrons: Negative unit chargeNeutrons: No charge.
No. A neutron carries no charge.
Protons, Neutrons, and Electrons are also called "subatomic particles." A neutron is a subatomic particle that has a mass that is ALMOST equal to the mass of a proton. A neutron carries no electric charge; so it is neither positive or negative. It carries a "neutral" charge. So remember, NEUtrons--->NEUtral.
Proton: positive Electron: negative Neutron: neutral
No. That would be called an ion.
The Proton carries a Positive charge. An Electron has a Negative charge, and a Neutron has no charge … it's Neutral.