Negative is more common. Negative charges are on the outsides of the electron shells in an atom. (hydrogen bonding, etc..) Positive charges are in the nucleus. It is possible to transfer positive charges, but I think that requires an explanation of nuclear fission.
They will repel each other.
Their charges will not "neutralize" but on the contrary add up, for other charges placed elsewhere, far from these two.
But if a third charge is placed exactly in the middle of two equal charges, then their respective effects will compensate and the charge placed in between them will be subject to a zero resultant force.
The same applies when the charges are not equal but still of the same sign, and the third charge is placed somewhere in between in such a way that the attractive or repelling forces are equal in magnitude, but (of course) directed in opposite directions.
They will continue attracting one another as long as there is a separation of charges. However, it is possible that there is a charge transfer; in this case, the charges might be partially or completely cancelled.
Conventional current flow was from positive to negative but was later proved false. Electron flow is from negative to positive.
Electrons are negatively charged particles so they would tend to flow toward the positive electrode if the electrons are loosely bound.
The objects repel each other.They try to move as far apart as they can.
They balance the atomic charge and electrical forces.
Some neutral objects have a weak dipole force where electron distribution is random across the whole object, and at any one given time, one side may be slightly more positive than the other. This attraction is very weak but it happens frequently especially in solutions.
Positively charged objects is a charge that has more protons than electrons as apposed to a negative charged object which is a charge carried by more electrons than protons. Hope i could be help Kristal :) edited by Frank
These are electrically positive objects.
Electron (-) and positron (+). Proton (+) and antiproton (-). Muon (-) and antimuon (+). up, charm, and top quarks (+2/3) and down, strange and bottom quarks (-1/3).
negative and positive charges
Fundamental laws of electric charges: opposite charges (positive and negative) attract, similar charges (positive and positive or negative and negative) repel, somtimes charged objects will attract a neutral object.
Objects comprise of charges.Opposite charges attract each other.
the law of electric charges states that like charges repel, or push away, and opposite charges attract.
They do not. Rather, objects with opposite charges attract each other.
Positively and negatively charged objects attract one another.
no, they repel. opposite charges attract
attract
That depends on what the charges are. There's an easy rule: opposites attract. So if one is positive and one is negative, they'll be attracted (the greater the charges, the greater the attraction), while if they are both positive or both negative, they'll be repelled (again, the greater the charges, the more they'll be repelled).
Opposite charges will always attract.
They balance the atomic charge and electrical forces.
the objects will attract with each other