Sorry, No. Payment in full of any type of account will not change the payment history.
The charge on a charged object is maintained by the movement of electrons within the object. If electrons are added or removed from the object, its charge will change. Charging methods such as friction, conduction, or induction can alter the charge on an object.
Policy rate is the rate of interest that banks charge. It can be a rate charged from credit cards, insurance policies, savings accounts, checking accounts, or other similar things.
Neutral objects will not be affected by the presence of charged objects, as they do not possess a net electric charge. Charged objects may induce a temporary charge in neutral objects through induction, but once the charged object is removed, the neutral object will return to its original state.
When you make an object charged, you have either added or removed electrons from it. Adding electrons makes it negatively charged, and removing electrons makes it positively charged. Electrons move onto the object, giving it a static charge.
When an object is charged by induction, it becomes polarized due to the redistribution of charges. The object does not gain or lose a net charge, but develops regions of positive and negative charge. If the inducing object is removed, the polarization disappears.
Why would you want to do anything? Having active accounts, instead of charged off accounts is a positive reflection of your past credit history and is probably causing you to have a credit score. This is a good thing, certainly much better than having charge offs, even paid charge offs showing. Your credit report is a history of how you have managed debt over the past 7 to 10 years. Accounts that were active during that period of time, whether open, closed, active or delinquent, are SUPPOSED to show on your credit report. Having them removed would certainly decrease your current credit score.
Yes, when outer electrons are removed from an atom, it becomes positively charged. This is because removing negative electrons leaves behind a surplus of positive charge in the form of the remaining protons in the nucleus.
It depends on many other factors like how many positive accounts you have, how many other negative accounts you have, how old they are, etc.
The past tense of charge is charged.
Charges cannot be created or destroyed, but they can be transferred from one object to another. When objects become charged, electrons are either added or removed, causing a redistribution of charge. The total charge in a closed system remains constant.
If electrons are removed from a neutral atom, what remains is a positively charged ion.
To find the fraction of electrons removed, we need to calculate the total charge of the copper ball when neutral, then compare it to the charge when +50 nC. Each electron has a charge of -1.6 x 10^-19 C. The number of electrons removed can be found by dividing the difference in charge by the charge of an electron. This will give us the fraction of electrons removed.