No. A neutron carries no charge.
The question does not make sense. A neutron is neutral NOT positive. When a neutron decays, it forms a positively charged proton and a negatively charged electron and an antineutrino.
A proton which is the positive charged particle, and a neutron which has no charge.
protons - positive charge electrons - negative charge neutrons - no charge
There are three primary subatomic particles: the neutron, the electron and the proton. The electron is negatively charged, the proton is positively charged and the neutron has no charge.
Neutrons do not have a positive or negative charge. They are one of the three basic subatomic particles, along with protons (positively charged) and electrons (negatively charged), that make up an atom. The neutron has a neutral charge.
A proton is positive, an electron is negative, and a neutron is neutral.
These particles are: neutron (positive) and electron (negative).
electron, negative proton, positive neutron, neutral
A particle that has a Positive charge is called the "proton" Proton=positive Electron=negative Neutron=neutral
The neutron is NOT positive.
The answer is in the names of the particles. The Neutron is neutral. The Electron is negative. The Proton is positive.
proton there is no such thing as an electrical charged nut there is such a thing as a charged particle, that is also known as neutron