Yes. Since two protons have the same charge they will repel each other.
The net force between two protons in a nucleus is attractive. The strong nuclear force simply over-whelms the electric force.
As the moving proton gets closer to the stationary proton, the electric force between them increases. This causes the moving proton to slow down and eventually come to a stop as the electrostatic force of repulsion between them balances the initial kinetic energy of the moving proton.
An electric field will exert a force on a proton due to its positive charge. The proton will experience a force in the direction of the electric field if the field is uniform, causing it to accelerate in that direction.
a proton attracts an electron
If a proton were placed within an electrostatic field, it would experience a force due to the electric field created by other charged particles. The direction of this force would depend on the orientation of the electric field lines, with the proton being attracted toward negatively charged regions and repelled by positively charged regions. The magnitude of the force can be calculated using Coulomb's law, which states that the force is proportional to the product of the charges and inversely proportional to the square of the distance between them. This interaction can cause the proton to accelerate in the direction of the net electric force acting on it.
The force experienced by a proton in an electric field will be the same as for any other charged particle with the same charge, because the force depends on the charge of the particle and the electric field strength. The charge of a proton is the same as the charge of an electron, just opposite in sign. The mass of the proton being 1836 times greater than the mass of an electron will not affect the force experienced by the proton in the electric field.
A proton attracts an neutron. B. A proton repels an electron. C. A proton attracts an electron.
Go to the top of page 6 in unit 4 and you will see an example that almost answers the tma question. Just flip the two force laws over and plug in the values on the back of the book. Remember, on the back of the book it states the electric charge of a proton so stick a minus sign in front and you have the electric charge of the electron. Good luck with the course Fellow SM358 student
There is no significant attraction between neutrons and electrons. Neither the electric force nor the strong nuclear force applies between them. There is an insignificant attraction due to gravity -- the gravity force between an electron one angstrom from a neutron is weaker than the electric force between that same electron and a proton a billion trillion kilometers away.
there is nothing called as an electric force...an electron revolves around a nucleus due to the electrostatic fore of attracion between the electron and the proton....any object , to undergo a circlar motion has to experience a centripetal force, which in the case of the atom is provided by the electrostatic force. Actually there is an electric force of attraction between the electron(s) and proton(S)
The repulsive force between proton-proton pairs inside the nucleus is called the electrostatic repulsion force. This force arises due to the positively charged protons within the nucleus experiencing mutual repulsion because they all have the same charge.
An electric force of attraction would occur between positively and negatively charged particles. Positively charged particles are attracted to negatively charged particles, according to the principle of opposites attract in electric forces.