Proton is the positive charge of an atom. So obviously it has a higher charge that electron (negative) and neutron (neutral).
The proton is one of the fundamental particles of the nucleus, the other is the neutron. The proton is positively charged, the neutron has no charge. They are held together by the strong nuclear force.
No, a proton's charge is +1.
A proton has a positive charge of 1.602 x 10-19 coulomb.
No. The electron and proton have the same amount of charge. Its just that the electron's charge is negative and the proton's charge is positive.
A proton has a positive charge.
Yes, a proton has a positive charge.
A proton always repels a proton because they both have the same kind of charge. It is the law of nature that particles with same kind of charge repel each other and particles with opposite charge attract each other. In an atomic nucleus, the protons attract each other due to the residual strong force. The strong force is quite a bit stronger than the electromagnetic force, but only acts over very small distances.
By definition, a proton is positive, so a proton will always have a positive charge.
A proton has a positive charge of +1 An electron has a negative charge of -1 An neutron has no charge
a proton has a positive charge
A proton has a positive charge which is equal in magnitude but opposite to the charge on an electron, which is negative.
The proton has a positive charge of +1.