An ion is both positively and negatively charged.
No. Protons are positively charged.
No, they become positively charged, because electrons carry a negative charge, and by losing an electron they lose one of the charges that previously balanced out the positive charges from the protons, becoming a positively charged ion.
Ions are molecules which have gained (negative) or lost (positive) an electron. Positive Charge are called Cations. Negative Charge are called Anions.
Ionic compounds are composed of negatively and positively charged atoms.
Protons are found in the nucleus of all atoms and are positively charged.
Atoms have a positively charged nucleus (with positively charged protons and neutral neutrons) at the centre and negatively charged electrons revolving around it.
No, ions are.
Atoms are neutrally, positively, or negatively charged.
Sodium has 11 positively charged protons. (All atoms have positively charged protons, though they differ in hte number of protons).
One! An atom is not made up of other atoms, but has a nucleus of a positively-charged proton and a neutrally-charged neutron. It is surrounded by a network of positively-charged particles called electrons. (sorry, NEGATIVELY charged particles called electrons!)
atoms in metallic bonds are positively charged due to stable configuration as the extra electrons are either donated to another atom or atom completes it last shell by receiving electrons which makes it positively charged.
An atom becomes a positively charged ion when it loses one or more electrons.