There is no such thing as a "positive neutron" or a "negative neutron". A neutron is always neutral.
The subatomic particle in an atom that has no charge is called a neutron. Neutrons are found in the nucleus of an atom along with protons, which have a positive charge, and electrons, which have a negative charge.
No, a neutron does not have a positive nor a negative charge. Its in between, too many neutrons can cause radiation, like cobalt-60 the number at the end tells you how much neutrons are in the atom.
A neutron is a part of the atom that has a Neutral charge so to say. The atom is composed of an electron, proton, and neutron. Electrons have the negative charge, Protons have a positive, and neutron has no charge. Remember it as in "Neutron is neutral" or "neutron is no". A free neutron (outside of an atom that is) has a half-life of less than 15 minutes.
The subatomic particles in an atom that have no charge are the neutrons.
No, it has no charge. That's why it is called neutron - the name is derived from "neutral".
An atom is made up of protons, neutrons, and electrons. A proton is positive, a neutron is neutral, and an electron is negative. So it has a neutral charge.
The positively charged particle in an atom is a proton. Proton - positive Neutron - neutral Electron - negative
The most important ones are the proton (positive charge, in the nucleus), the neutron (electrically neutral, also in the nucleus), and the electron (negative charge, goes around the nucleus).
The charge on a neutron is zero. It has no electrical charge; it is a neutral particle.As the name suggests, the neutron is neutral, with neither positive nor negative charge.
Ion... Anion, negative charge... Cation, positive charge
Neutrons have neutral charge.
Neutron