A coulomb is defined as a positive charge. 1 coulomb is the charge of 6.24 x 1018 protons. Multiply that by a million (106) for your question. However, the same number of electrons would have a charge of minus a million coulomb.
6.2x10(15)
Electric charges contain too many electrons or too few electrons.
10
Something is neutral when there are just as many positive charges as negative charges. A normal atom has just as many positive protons in its nucleus as it has negative electrons orbiting around its nucleus.
when a substance is electrically charged it has either too few or too many electrons. when the electroscope is brought near a charged object the electrons 'jump' if the substance had too many electrons then the extras would 'jump' to the electroscope giving it a negative charge if the substance had too few electrons then the electrons from the electroscpe would 'jump' to the substance, giving the electroscope a positive charge
By 'moving charges' I assume you mean 'electrons'. The electrons will move in a random fashion whether we're talking about DC or AC. However, the electrons will move in 1 general direction in DC while they will move back and forth in AC. one pathway
Electric charges contain too many electrons or too few electrons.
helium has 2 electrons
A boron atom has 5 electrons.
Metals usually lose electrons, this is why many charges are positive.
10
65 million
Electrons have a negative charge, and protons have a positive charge. If i have more protons(plus charges) than electrons(minus charges) overall the atom will have a positive charge(mabye +1 or +2 etc....depending how many more protons there are compared to electrons) If there are more electrons(minus charges) than protons(plus charges) then overall the atom will have a negative charge(mabye -1 or -2 etc....depending how many more electrons there are compared to protons) These charged atoms are known as ions.
A neutral atom of Beryllium has 4 electrons. (Its atomic number is 4)
In a "normal" atom, the number of electrons equal the number of protons. Many atoms, however, have missing or extra electrons, giving these atoms positive or negative charges, which we call ions.
None. the positive charges on the 13 protons and the negative charges on the 13 electrons cancel each other out
Something is neutral when there are just as many positive charges as negative charges. A normal atom has just as many positive protons in its nucleus as it has negative electrons orbiting around its nucleus.
79 protons - *79 positive charges*. However, they are balanced by 79 electrons, so the total net charge on most gold atoms is zero.