Yes. That is what it means to be electrically neutral.
Yes.
A neutron has a zero or neutral charge and is found in the nucleus of an atom.
An oxide ion has a negative two charge (-2)
A sodium atom has a net charge of zero. A sodium ion has a net charge of 1+.
The ionic charge of an atom or ion can not be determined from the mass number and atomic number alone, because the ionic charge if any depends on the surplus or deficiency of electrons compared to protons in the atom or ion. Ordinarily, the symbol C-12, with no further modification, indicates a neutral atom, which would have zero ionic charge.
Na+ and Cl- together NaCl (neutral), equal number of pos. and neg. charges add up to neutral (zero charge): so, it's truetrue
A neutral atom will have a charge of ZERO
A neutron has a zero or neutral charge and is found in the nucleus of an atom.
Neutral atoms always have a net charge of 0(zero).
There is no net electrical charge on an "unreacted" atom.
Because in a normal atom the are there are the same numbers of electrons and protons. Charge of an electron is 1- and charge of a proton is 1+, thus the overall charge will be zero.
zero .. such an atom is neutral. No net charge
Zero. (Ions have charge; atoms are always neutral.)
Simple, it is a neutral atom, having an equal number of protons and electrons.
As the tern neutral might imply, the overall charge of a neutral atomis zero.
Na+ and Cl- together NaCl (neutral), equal number of pos. and neg. charges add up to neutral (zero charge): so, it's truetrue
A proton and an electron possess equal amount of charge (about 1.6e-19 C), except that a proton carries a positive charge and an electron, negative. Hence, the net charge is nil -- the atom is electrically neutral.
The neutral atom of magnesium has no electrical charge; the ion is bivalent.