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A charged object attracts the neutral object by polarising it.
It will have more electrons. Electrons carry a negative charge that is equivalent to the positive charge carried by protons. Thus, if an object is negatively charged, it will have more electrons than protons. By the same reasoning, if an object is positively charged, it will have more protons than electrons. As you may have guessed, a neutral object will have the same amount of electrons and protons, causing all the charges to cancel out. Therefore, if a compound has a negative sign added to the end of it, such as NO3-, that means the compound has one more electron than it would if it were neutral.
The charged object may induce a separation of charges in the neutral object.The charged object may induce a separation of charges in the neutral object.The charged object may induce a separation of charges in the neutral object.The charged object may induce a separation of charges in the neutral object.
It has a positive charge.
An object is neutral when it is not positively or negatively charged. All atomsare neutral. This is because all atoms have equal numbers of positively charged protons and negatively charged electrons, leading to overall neutral charge.
The numbers of protons and of electrons in a neutral object are the same.
In a electrostatically neutral object there are equal numbers of charged particles (electrons and protons).
It gains electrons. So if it gains electrons, then the neutral object becomes negatively charged as well.
Because of the electrons and protons the object has
It has equal numbers of protons and electrons.
Although a substance may contain millions of negatively charged electrons, it also contains millions of positively charged protons. The object will be neutral when the number of protons equals the number of electrons.
A charged object attracts the neutral object by polarising it.
Assuming you mean the charge of an atom with equal numbers of protons and electrons, the charge of the atom would be zero/neutral.
It happens when the object is composed of atoms with the shell of electrons is having deficiency of few electrons. In this case these atoms tends to acquire electrons to fill their outer electron shell and consequently getting negatively charges.
In normal matter, the only charged elementary particles are protons and electrons. An electrically neutral object will have exactly as many protons as electrons. A charged object will have slightly more of one than the other. But under normal conditions, the difference is extremely small compared to the total numbers.
Electrons can move from object to object. Electrons have a negative charge. So if an object is determined to have a positive charge, then some of the electrons have moved from the object to somewhere else. Something with a neutral charge has the same number of electrons [-] and protons [+]. If electrons [-] leave, then there will be more protons, and a net positive charge. If an object gains electrons, then the object has a net negative charge.
Yes, protons always have a positive charge.