object with more no. of electrons than protons in it.....
FOR tESTING THE SIGN OF CHARGE ON BODY, a device called GOLD LEAF ELECTROSCOPE. When the disc of a positively charged is touched with any plate of the charge capacitor. IF the divergence of gold leaf increases, then the plate is positively charged and if the divergence in the leaf decrease then the plate of the capacitor is nagatively charged.
When an object is charged by conduction, it comes into direct contact with a charged object, causing electrons to transfer between the two objects. If the charged object is negatively charged, electrons will flow from the charged object to the uncharged object, resulting in the uncharged object becoming negatively charged as well.
Induction is the process where an object becomes charged by placing another charged object near it. When a charged object is brought close to a neutral object, the charges in the neutral object redistribute, causing it to become charged.
No.
Charging a neutral object by touching it with a charged object is known as charging by conduction. When a charged object comes into contact with a neutral object, electrons can be transferred between the two objects, causing the neutral object to become charged.
Some ways in which an object can become charged are friction, contact and induction.
When an object is charged by induction, it means that the object becomes polarized or temporarily charged in response to the presence of a charged object nearby, without direct contact. This occurs because the charges in the object rearrange themselves in response to the nearby charged object, leading to an imbalance of charges.
The charge on a charged object is maintained by the movement of electrons within the object. If electrons are added or removed from the object, its charge will change. Charging methods such as friction, conduction, or induction can alter the charge on an object.
A negatively charged object. Also, a neutral object, through an induced separation of charges.
When an object is charged by contact, the object getting the charge has the same charge compared with that of the object giving the charge. so if the object giving the charge has a positive charge, so does the object getting the charge
This statement is not accurate. A charged object can still interact with an object that has no charge through electrostatic forces. The charged object can induce a charge on the neutral object and attract or repel it, depending on the type of charges involved.
In practical life , it is not possible to identify the negative and positive charges.The positive and negative charges are identified only experimentally.So, practical example of this is not possible.But I can tell that a negatively charged object and positively charged object attract each other.for A+ lost electrons