No, a gamma ray does not have a plus two charge. A gamma ray is electromagnetic energy, and has no charge at all. It is the alpha particle, a type of particulate radiation, that has a charge of plus two. Use the links below for more information.
Nope. They are photons, packets of energy which behave as both waves and particles, and so do not have a charge.
Gamma rays.
No. Gamma rays will not make materials radioactive.
true
Electromagnetic energy can propogate through a vacuum, so energy transfer can occur in the form of light, heat, x rays, gamma rays, gamma rays etc.
gamma rays
No, gamma rays are electromagnetic radiation which has no charge.
Gamma rays are electromagnetic rays and thus have no charge or mass.
it has no charges
No. Gamma rays are massless and have no charge
Alpha rays are positively charged, beta negatively charged and gamma rays is an electromagnetic wave(like light) which has no charge. They have obtained their charges on basis of where they originated from within the atom.
False. Gamma rays are photons (light pieces), and have zero charge.
Gamma rays consists of waves of energy associated with electric and magnetic fields resulting from the acceleration of an electric charge
Gamma rays are a form of electromagnetic radiation, essentially just a high-frequency form of light invisible to human eyes. Like all light, gamma rays do not carry any electrical charge.
it remains the same gamma rays have no mass and no electrical charge
The gamma particle's symbol is the lowercase Greek gamma, the velar, which looks like a lower case western v, but the base has a narrow loop, and the left top has a curved serif. In print, it looks like a Y, shifted down as if it were a lower case letter with a descender. We can't represent it here on Answers.com, but the Related Link below will take you to WikiPedia where you can see a representation of it. The charge of a gamma particle is that of the photon, which is zero.
D. No mass or charge -Castle learning.
because they have no charge