You get charge discrepancies in the atom. So an atom that has more electrons than protons (say a chlorine anion) will have a net, negative charge. An atom that has more protons than electrons will have a net positive charge. A charged particle is more reactive than a neutral one.
An "Ion" has a different number of electrons than a standard atom. If it has more electrons than protons it is a negative ion, if it has less electrons than protons it is a positive ion.
Atoms that have an unequal number of protons and electrons are called ions.
If you have less electrons that protons, you get a positive charge. If you have more electrons than protons, you get a negative charge.
It would become unstable and would go through beta decay to reach a stable amount of protons to neutrons.
if the ratio of protons to electrons is not 1:1 the atom will have a net charge
Because of the electrons and protons the object has
It has equal numbers of protons and electrons.
It gains electrons. So if it gains electrons, then the neutral object becomes negatively charged as well.
When an object is charged, it either has a surplus or deficiency of electrons. If it has a surplus, the object is negatively charged, and if it has a deficiency, then it is positively charged (has more protons than electrons).
If the Object is an aton, it has more protons than electrons.
The numbers of protons and of electrons in a neutral object are the same.
If an object has an unequal number of protons and electrons, then the object becomes electrically charged. An object that is positively charged has more protons than electrons.
Although a substance may contain millions of negatively charged electrons, it also contains millions of positively charged protons. The object will be neutral when the number of protons equals the number of electrons.
Electrons can move from object to object. Electrons have a negative charge. So if an object is determined to have a positive charge, then some of the electrons have moved from the object to somewhere else. Something with a neutral charge has the same number of electrons [-] and protons [+]. If electrons [-] leave, then there will be more protons, and a net positive charge. If an object gains electrons, then the object has a net negative charge.
Assuming you mean the charge of an atom with equal numbers of protons and electrons, the charge of the atom would be zero/neutral.
Its number of Protons is more than Electrons
object with more no. of electrons than protons in it.....
Because of the electrons and protons the object has
In normal matter, the only charged elementary particles are protons and electrons. An electrically neutral object will have exactly as many protons as electrons. A charged object will have slightly more of one than the other. But under normal conditions, the difference is extremely small compared to the total numbers.
It will repel other positively charged entities and attract all negatively charged entities.
It doesn't. A positively charged body is deficient in electrons. In an uncharged object there are equal numbers of positively charged protons and negatively charged electrons. Removing electrons will leave more protons than electrons, so the object will be positively charged. Such an object is said to have a deficiency or electrons rather than a surplus of electrons because it is generally easier to remove electrons than it is to add protons. Electrons occupy the outer shells of an atom and have a much lower mass than protons. The protons, by contrast, are bound together in the dense nucleus.
positive