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you will get shocked and it will probaly hurt

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13y ago
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11y ago

They become positively charged.

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15y ago

It becomes charged. (negatively)

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Q: What happens when you add electrons to an uncharged object?
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Why must a positively charged body have a deficiency of protons?

It doesn't. A positively charged body is deficient in electrons. In an uncharged object there are equal numbers of positively charged protons and negatively charged electrons. Removing electrons will leave more protons than electrons, so the object will be positively charged. Such an object is said to have a deficiency or electrons rather than a surplus of electrons because it is generally easier to remove electrons than it is to add protons. Electrons occupy the outer shells of an atom and have a much lower mass than protons. The protons, by contrast, are bound together in the dense nucleus.


Can a electrically-charge object attract uncharged object?

Yes, and in fact they do. You can easily see this yourself by rubbing a balloon on a sweater and then "sticking" it to a wall.This happens because of something called "induced dipoles".Let's say you have an electrically charged object ... negatively charged, for example.If you bring it near an uncharged object, what happens is that the electrons in the molecules of the uncharged object tend to be repelled by the charged object. They move as far to the opposite side as they can get.Because the electromagnetic force gets smaller with distance, the uncharged molecules now have a slight net attraction to the charged object, since the part of the molecule that's attracted to the charged object is now closer to the charged object than the part of the molecule that's repelled by it. This means the attractive force is very slightly greater than the repulsive force. For any individual molecule, it's not much, but there are a LOT of molecules in any object large enough to see, and those tiny attractions add up.


What happens when you add friction to an object in motion?

The object slows down and eventully stops.


What happens when you add an object in boiling water?

This object become warmer, or react with water, or is dissolved.


What happens to an object to make it positively charged?

I think that a positively charged object can not attract one another


What happens to the volume if you add more of the object?

it turns up loud and you get in trouble


What happens when scientists add heat energy to an object or take heat energy away from an object?

as scientists add heat too an object , the objec begin to pre-heat and began to dissolve .


If you add pressure to an object what happens to its density?

the density will increase because there will be less space


How do you know that nickel has a plus two charge?

because it will have more electrons add electrons= add charge


What are two ways of increasing the momentum of an object?

1. Add mass to the object. 2. Add energy to the object.


What happens to the number of electrons in an atom when the atomic number increases?

The atomic number is specific to the element itself - not the quantity. It does not change as you add in more of the element.


What happens when you had a proton to the nucleus of an atom?

Im thinking you mean add instead of had? well when you add a proton it becomes a different element because each element has a different number of protons. When you add electrons or take away electrons they become ions. If the neutrons in the nucleus changes it becomes an isotope. To conclude, each element has its own unique proton count.