Yes. Is is made up of one two quarks (charge 2/3 each), and one down quarks (charge -1/3), for a total charge of one.
No. The charge of a proton (or an anti-proton) comes from the three quarks within it, quarks whose charge add up to plus one (or, in the case of anti-proton, minus one). Which leads to the obvious question: where does the charge of the QUARKS come from? The answer is simple, but frustrating: in our Universe, charge just IS. Quarks and leptons have a quality we refer to as "charge," a quality that causes a force to exist between any two particles that both have charge. We have no further understanding beyond that: charge just exists. Note, however, that, in any Universe that did not have charge, there would be no life noting that charge did not exist in that Universe -- which would make such a Universe a very un-interesting place.
They are Quarks. A Proton Consits of 3 Quarks, comprising of 2 "Up" Quarks and 1 "Down" Quark. "Up" Quarks have a charge of 2/3, and "Down" Quarks have a charge of -1/3, hence the charge on a proton on +1. Similarly a Neutron Consists on 3 Quarks, 1 "Up" and 2 "Down" hence 0 charge.
there are 3 main particles - electron, proton and neutron. however, protons and neutrons both contain what are called quarks. proton has 2 up quarks (charge each 2/3), and 1 down quark (charge -1/3) which gives a total charge of +1. Similarily, a neutron has 2 down quarks and 1 up quark (for 0 charge).
Quarks are the main constituent of matter. It takes two up (posistively charged, stage I Fermions) and one down (Negatively charged Stage I Fermion) quark, the up having electric charge +2/3 and the down having electric charge -1/3, one with red color charge, one with green color charge, and one with blue color charge, to make a proton. (Electric charge +1)(all the Stage I Quarks have spin 1/2) Not sure what makes a neutron...
Quarks. There are three quarks in a proton.
No. The charge of a proton (or an anti-proton) comes from the three quarks within it, quarks whose charge add up to plus one (or, in the case of anti-proton, minus one). Which leads to the obvious question: where does the charge of the QUARKS come from? The answer is simple, but frustrating: in our Universe, charge just IS. Quarks and leptons have a quality we refer to as "charge," a quality that causes a force to exist between any two particles that both have charge. We have no further understanding beyond that: charge just exists. Note, however, that, in any Universe that did not have charge, there would be no life noting that charge did not exist in that Universe -- which would make such a Universe a very un-interesting place.
The proton has two up (electrical charge +1/3) quarks and one down (electrical charge -1/3) quark.
P=UUD (two up, one down) N=DDU (two down, one up) Down quarks are charge -1/3 relative to a proton and up quarks are charge +2/3 relative to a proton.
Electrons, down quarks, strange quarks, bottom quarks, muon lepton, and tau lepton all have negative charge. Also, the boson can be negative.
They are Quarks. A Proton Consits of 3 Quarks, comprising of 2 "Up" Quarks and 1 "Down" Quark. "Up" Quarks have a charge of 2/3, and "Down" Quarks have a charge of -1/3, hence the charge on a proton on +1. Similarly a Neutron Consists on 3 Quarks, 1 "Up" and 2 "Down" hence 0 charge.
The neutron has no net charge. It is made of 2 down quarks (building block for neutrons, electrons and protons) and 1 up quarks. an up quark has a charge of +2/3 of an elementary charge (charge of a single proton), and a down quarks has a charge of -1/3. If you add it up, there is no charge.
The neutron has no net charge. It is made of 2 down quarks (building block for neutrons, electrons and protons) and 1 up quarks. an up quark has a charge of +2/3 of an elementary charge (charge of a single proton), and a down quarks has a charge of -1/3. If you add it up, there is no charge.
A proton is made of two Up Quarks with a 2/3 positive charge, and one Down Quark with a 1/3 negative charge. So this gives it a net charge of 1.
there are 3 main particles - electron, proton and neutron. however, protons and neutrons both contain what are called quarks. proton has 2 up quarks (charge each 2/3), and 1 down quark (charge -1/3) which gives a total charge of +1. Similarily, a neutron has 2 down quarks and 1 up quark (for 0 charge).
Protons, which have positive charge, attract electrons, which have negative charge. Also, quarks with positive charge attract quarks with negative charge. (Actually, it is this electric charge which defines the properties of the particle they make up. A proton has more quarks with positive charges than with negative charges, for example.)
Quarks are the main constituent of matter. It takes two up (posistively charged, stage I Fermions) and one down (Negatively charged Stage I Fermion) quark, the up having electric charge +2/3 and the down having electric charge -1/3, one with red color charge, one with green color charge, and one with blue color charge, to make a proton. (Electric charge +1)(all the Stage I Quarks have spin 1/2) Not sure what makes a neutron...
A proton is made up of two "up quarks" and one "down Quarks"