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Matter becomes charged by electric charges, static electricity and an electric field.
In electricity, Insulators help insulate electric charges. Conductors conduct the electric charges and make them into electricity.
Well, matter is atomic by nature, and probably tiny quantum energy strings. Matter is "electrical" in the sense that the outer shells of elements swap electrons to form compounds with atomic bonds.
Electric charges behave as a matter and it contains three building blocks of matter, they are :electrons, protons and neutrons of which two are electrically charge
Atoms in matter always contain electric charges. You cannot create or destroy electric charges, but you can move them around.ØThere are two types of electric charge - positive and negative.ØWhen chargers are forced to move from their normal positions, say by being rubbed together, we say they become 'charged'with 'electricity'.ØSince these charges remain stationary (in one spot) on the surface of the charged object, it is called staticelectricity.
Matter becomes charged by electric charges, static electricity and an electric field.
Electric charges behave as a matter and it contains three building blocks of matter, they are :electrons, protons and neutrons of which two are electrically charge
yes
In electricity, Insulators help insulate electric charges. Conductors conduct the electric charges and make them into electricity.
Well, matter is atomic by nature, and probably tiny quantum energy strings. Matter is "electrical" in the sense that the outer shells of elements swap electrons to form compounds with atomic bonds.
Electric charges behave as a matter and it contains three building blocks of matter, they are :electrons, protons and neutrons of which two are electrically charge
A continuous flow of negative charges is called an electric current.
Electrons are sub atomic particles and they are matter as they have mass and electric charge.
Atoms in matter always contain electric charges. You cannot create or destroy electric charges, but you can move them around.ØThere are two types of electric charge - positive and negative.ØWhen chargers are forced to move from their normal positions, say by being rubbed together, we say they become 'charged'with 'electricity'.ØSince these charges remain stationary (in one spot) on the surface of the charged object, it is called staticelectricity.
Based on just a few simple things that popular news magazines mentionwhen they talk about the weird subject of dark matter, we're pretty safein assuming that dark matter has no electrical charge.-- No place in the universe is known to have dark matter.-- Dark matter is hypothesized ("just a theory") but has never been observed.-- It can't have an electrical charge, because if it did, then---- it would interact with other observed electrical charges and observed electromagnetic fields,------ which is exactly what it doesn't do,-------- which is why it has never been observed and is called "dark" matter.
neutral. Positive and negative charges cancel each others.
The property that makes up electric charge is called just that: "electric charge". Note that the particles also have other properties.