The MAJORITY of matter has a net charge of ZERO.
Electrical charge inside matter can remain neutralized or cancelled out by opposite charges present in the matter. This can result in a net neutral charge overall, even though there may be charged particles present within the matter. The presence of equal amounts of positive and negative charges can lead to no net electrical forces being observed at a macroscopic level.
No. Plasmas are generally neutral just like other states of matter.
The net charge is the total amount of charge that the ion will have. So you will find out the charge of each group and add them all together for the net charge.
The net charge of DNA is negative.
No an electron does not have a net charge of 0, in fact it has a net charge of -1.
A crystal of salt consists of electrons and positive ions. How does the net charge of the electrons compare with the net charge of the ions
A sodium atom has a net charge of zero. A sodium ion has a net charge of 1+.
Current is the flow of electric charge, not the total charge itself. It is called a net charge because in a circuit the movement of charge is a result of the difference in charges between different points, creating a flow of net charge.
Net charge. When the negative charge of the number of electrons equals the positive charge of the number of protons, it is said to be neutral. Having unequal numbers of electrons to protons, a net charge is then measurable. This atom is then said to be an ION or to be IONIZED. That is except for Hydrogen, but well, that's another matter altogether!
No, h2 does not have a net charge. It is a neutral molecule.
there is no net charge on the capacitor because nomber of positive and negative charge and negetive are equal.
No. Neutrons do not have a net charge. They are comprised of two down quarks, each with a charge of -1/3 and one up quark, with a charge of +2/3. These cancel out, for a net charge of zero.Constrast this with the proton, with one down quark, -1/3, and two up quarks, +2/3. for a net charge of +1.