An electrically charged object has an imbalance of positive or negative charges, while a neutral object has an equal number of positive and negative charges. Charged objects can attract or repel other charged objects due to their electric fields, whereas neutral objects do not exert such forces.
The charged object will induce opposite charges in the electrically neutral surface due to electrostatic forces. This will result in the redistribution of charges on the surface without physically transferring any charge to it.
Provide your second object is an insulator, - able to carry an electrical charge - it will have an electrical charge induced on it by the presence of a nearby electrically charged object. So, the second object does not need to have its own independent electrical charge, it is sufficient that it can carry one.
The magnesium atom is electrically neutral. It has 12 protons in the nucleus, which are positively charged, and 12 electrons surrounding the nucleus, which are negatively charged. The positive and negative charges balance each other out, resulting in an overall neutral charge for the atom.
It will still have a electrical charge.
No, NH3 is a neutral molecule.
An object is neutral if it has an equal number of positively charged protons and negatively charged electrons, resulting in a net charge of 0. This balance of charges causes the object to be electrically neutral and not attracted to or repelled by other charged objects.
The object with zero charge is electrically neutral.
When a negatively charged object touches a neutral object, electrons transfer from the negatively charged object to the neutral object, causing the neutral object to gain electrons. This results in the neutral object becoming negatively charged.
A object without electrical charges.
A object without electrical charges.
There is no "why", because most of the objectsaround us are not electrically charged.