An electric field.
A moving electric charge produces both an electric field and a magnetic field. The magnetic field surrounds the moving charge and is perpendicular to both the direction of motion and the electric field. This combined electromagnetic field is described by Maxwell's equations.
Every electric charge is surrounded by an electric field.
An electric field surrounds the charge and exerts force on other charges.
An electric field surrounds every charged object, exerting a force on other charged objects within its vicinity. This electric field extends infinitely in all directions, influencing how charged particles interact with one another.
An electric monopole is a hypothetical concept in physics where there is a single isolated electric charge without an opposite charge nearby. In reality, such monopoles have not been observed as every electric charge is either positive or negative and exists in pairs.
A proton is surrounded by an electric field, which interacts with other charged particles. It also interacts with a magnetic field under certain conditions, such as when it moves through a magnetic field.
you can use electric car stations, but cant find them every where, they are wery rare, i recommend charging at home :)
No, not every charged object produces an electric field parallel to its surface. The orientation of the electric field depends on the distribution of charge on the object and its shape. The electric field can point in any direction depending on the configuration of the charges.
In sodium sulfide (Na2S), two sodium ions are needed for every sulfide ion to balance the charges. Sodium has a +1 charge, and sulfide has a -2 charge. By having two sodium ions (each with a +1 charge) for every sulfide ion (with a -2 charge), the overall compound achieves charge neutrality.
An electromagnetic field.
We've seen that an atom consists of a whole bunch of different kinds of particles. The next logical question (and we do want to be logical, don't we?) is: "What holds it all together?" What makes all this stuff an atom, rather than just a bunch of stuff flying past each other?Well, there are basically two things that hold it together. Two forces, that is. The first of these has to do with electric charge, something I mentioned on the previous page. Electric charge comes in two varieties: positive and negative. The main carriers of positive charge are protons, while the main carriers of negative charge are electrons. (Within protons and neutrons, the quarks themselves carry charge, but this is only important to us in that the net charge of a proton or neutron is equal to the sum of the charges of all its quarks: zero for a neutron, and a small positive amount for a proton.) Every proton carries exactly the same amount of positive charge, and every electron carries a negative charge exactly opposite that of a proton. There are other particles with electric charge, but they tend to live only a very short time before they decay, and so they're mostly unimportant for atoms.The significance of electric charge is that it forms the basis for electric force. Any particle with electric charge will exert a force on any other particle with charge. (And vice versa, of course.) And there are two rules describing the electric force.Opposite charges attract; like charges repel.The force gets weaker as the two charges get farther apart. LOL Anywaz, gtg
Wall