It does if it's moving.
When a charged particle moves perpendicular to a magnetic field, it experiences a magnetic force that acts perpendicular to both the particle's velocity and the magnetic field direction. This force can cause the charged particle to move in a circular path due to the magnetic field's influence on its direction of motion.
A charged particle naturally changes direction in a magnetic field. This is because any charged particle produces a magnetic field when it is moving. And if the charged particle is moving through a magnetic field, the two fields (in this case the Earth's and the one created by the moving particle) interact to deflect the particle. The particle will be deflected "to the side" or laterally, and positively charged particles will be deflected in the opposite direction of negatively charged one.
It produced a magnetic field. If it's charged, it can be negative OR positive. It's magnetic because if they're both alike signs (both positive or both negative) they repel like magnets. If one particle is positive and one is negative, they attract like magnets.
This particle is the electron.
A chargeless mass particle is a particle that does not have an electric charge. Examples include neutrinos and neutrons. They do not interact with electromagnetic forces and are unaffected by electric and magnetic fields.
Magnetic force in itself does not store energy, but it can transfer energy when it is doing work, such as moving a charged particle through a magnetic field. The energy associated with magnetic force is generally considered to be potential energy based on the position and orientation of magnetic materials.
Electron
Electron
Each electron in every atom is a tiny magnet because each electron is a charged particle, and it is in motion. Any moving charged particle will create a magnetic field around its path of travel. That makes every moving charged particle "vulnerable" to the effects of any magnetic field "across" or "through" its path of travel.
Maxwell described that electricity and magnetism cannot be separated. If you examine maxwell's equations you can see that a moving electric charge will produce an electric field. You can also see that a magnetic field that changes in time can produce an electric field. Maxwell also predicted that an electric and magnetic field can propagate infinitely together- this is called a wave (otherwise known as light, x-rays, microwaves, etc...).
Every atom is electrically neutral because the number of positively charged protons in the nucleus is equal to the number of negatively charged electrons orbiting the nucleus. This balance of positive and negative charges results in an overall neutral charge for the atom.
Yes, a moving charge can produce a magnetic field as it generates a magnetic field due to its motion. This phenomenon is described by Ampere's law in electromagnetism.