I believe it does. From what I know, I think it makes a NUTURAL charge, but I can't be sure.
Electric Field between positive and negative charges. If the Electric Field in which both the positive and negative charges are present is stronger than the Electric Field between the two charges we are talking about, the the negative charge will move away from the positive charge in that positive direction of the field. If not, then the negative charge will get attracted to the positive charge and stay at the position of the positive charge. It will be pulled toward the source of the electric field. (Novanet)
Did you mean "The strength of electric field is positive or negative"? Anyway, there is your answer.. The strength of an electric field E at any point is defined as the electric force F exerted per unit positive electric charge q at that point, or E = F/q.You can say that it is positive.
The electric field around a negative charge points inward, towards the charge, while the electric field around a positive charge points outward, away from the charge. The electric field strength decreases with distance from both charges, following an inverse square law relationship.
Positive electric fields point away from positive charges and towards negative charges, while negative electric fields point towards positive charges and away from negative charges. In both cases, the direction indicates the direction that a positive test charge would move if placed in that field.
they have both negitive and positive charge
When a positive and negative charge collide, their forces act in the same direction, from positive to negative. As a result, contrary charges are attracted to one another: the electric field and forces produced by two electrical charges of opposite polarity. Both charges are attracted to each other.
A neutron has no electric charge. However, it is made up of smaller particles (quarks), which have both positive and negative charges. The total sum of all these charges, in the case of a neutron, is zero.
both because every object has both positive and negative charges but mainly has positive charges.
Both. Positive charge comes from the positive sids (+) and negative charge comes from the negative side (-)
An ion's charge will be either positive or negative, but not both. The charges are mutually exclusive. A positive ion is called a cation, and a negative ion is called an anion.
Positive and negative charges would have not effect on an object without charge.
if the positivbe neuatns are catolones then they will be positively charges. if the neutons are spaced then they will be negatively charged :) I THINK