well an electron is negetive and a nuetron is i nether positive or negetic=ve so is helps keep balence between protons and electron
No. The words "acid" and "neutron" have little to nothing to do with each other. A Lewis acid is an electron acceptor.
There is zero net charge as the proton (+ve) and electron (-ve) cancel each other out and the neutron is neutral.
No, a positron cannot react with a neutron in any kind of annihilation reaction. An electron and a positron can, and the same with a neutron and an anti-neutron, but it does not occur between a positron and a neutron.
Because it's basically made of a proton and an electron, and those two charges cancel each other out.
A neutron has no charge (neutron-neutral). It is simply there for weight.
e- = electron p+ = proton N = neutron
Proton: positive Electron: negative Neutron: neutral
Proton: positive Electron: negative Neutron: neutral
It is a confusing subject and it gets worse the more you get into it! Basically, in beta-minus decay, a neutron changes into a proton within the nucleus, and an electron and a neutrino are emitted. This is put down to the weak nuclear force. The theory goes that a down quark in the neutron changes to an up quark by emitting a W boson which then becomes an electron and a neutrino, whilst the neutron becomes a proton. That said, I am not sure what you mean by 'neutron and proton balancing each other', as the reaction is more like your second proposition. The isotope in question then becomes the element with an atomic number one higher than the original, because now it has an extra proton, though its atomic weight is almost the same.
Neutron - no charge, Proton +1, Electron -1
13 Protons/Electrons (13 of each) 14 Neutrons
Proton: Positive charge Electron: Negative charge Neutron: No charge