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Both. Opposite charges attract, like charges repulse.
The movement of air can cause different parts of a cloud have opposite charges.
Gravitational force is always attractive, never repelling. It doesn't depend on any electrical charges, and doesn't change based on temperature, or pressure.
Not necessarily. They always have opposite electric charges, but you can certainly shoot them both in the same direction through a tube. If they then encounter a magnetic field in the tube, it's true that then they'll curve in opposite directions.
The force between charges is repulsive between charges with the same sign, and attractive between charges with opposite signs. The cathode is charged negative, and the anode is charged positive. Electrons have a negative charge. So any electron in the neighborhood of a pair of charged electrodes will be repelled by the cathode and attracted to the anode.
Gravitational forces are always attractive. Electrical charges are repulsive for same-type charges, and attractive for opposite-types.
Both. Opposite charges attract, like charges repulse.
Opposite charges will always attract.
The electric lines of force. A repelling force is between two like charges. An attractive force is between two opposite charges.
Charged particle create a force between each other. The force is attractive if the charges are opposite and repulsive if the charges are the same.
*the attractive force between opposite electrical charges
Neither charge on its own has an attractive force. Opposite charges (positive-negative) will attract while like charges (negative-negative or positive-positive) will repel.
The nature of the force between charged particles in that the force is an electrostatic one. If the electric charges are alike, then a repulsive force exists, and if the charges are opposite, then the force will be an attractive one. The fundamental law of electrostatics applies here, and that is that opposite charges attract and like charges repel.That will largely depend on what statements are included on thelist that you have not seen fit to include with the question.
Agree, because this repulsion of like electrostatic charges is an inherent property of such charges. However, the repulsive force can be exceeded by attractive, atomic level forces, such as those that form atomic nuclei from many protons, or by attractive electrostatic forces between opposite charges, as occurs in metallic bonding and ionic solids.
The opposite of repulsive is attractive or appealing.
Repulcion it si of opposite
opposite charges