attract
'Like' charges (both positive or both negative) repel.Unlike charges (one of each) attract.
Positively and negatively charged objects attract one another.
everything. Positives do one and negitives do another and they kinda work together and without either of them electricity is useless and wouldnt exist.
Two equal charges will repel one another. Two different charges (i.e., a positive and a negative charge) will attract one another.
Particles with a negative charge typically move most from one object to another. This is because negative charges are often more easily exchanged or transferred compared to positive charges.
Poles on a magnet attract or repel because of the way the electrons line up. The electrons in the valence shells tend to line up on one side of the nucleus. The electrons have a negative charge and the nucleus has a positive charge. The negative charges in one magnet repel the negative charges in another magnet but attract the positive charges in another magnet.
Negative charges are created when a particle gains one or more electrons.
Opposite charges attract one another, such as positive and negative charges in an electrical field. This attraction occurs due to the exchange of particles or force carriers between the opposite charges. It is a fundamental principle in physics governing the behavior of charged particles.
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 negative. if you draw a triangle on your page and put a negative sign in one corner a negative sign in another and a positive sign in the last corner when you are multiplying or dividing negatives and positives you cover up the two signs your using and the one not covered is what its going to be!!! Hope that strategy helps you!!!
Electric charges that are the same (positive-positive or negative-negative) repel each other, while charges that are different (positive-negative) attract each other. This is described by Coulomb's law, which states that the force between two charges is directly proportional to the product of the charges and inversely proportional to the square of the distance between them.
Charges repel each other when they have the same charge to them. For example, two electrons repel. Two protons repel. Two negatively charged particles will repel each other. As will two positively charged particles will.