The nucleus of an atom has a positive charge.
The protons in the nucleus of an atom are charged oppositely from the electrons in the cloud around them. By convention, their charge is defined as "positive" while the charge on the electrons is defined as "negative".
electron
Not quite. You can have an atom of an element, for example an atom of Hydrogen, but not a Hydrogen of an atom. The parts of an atom are protons (positively charged), neutrons (no charge), and electrons (negatively charged).
Not quite. You can have an atom of an element, for example an atom of Hydrogen, but not a Hydrogen of an atom. The parts of an atom are protons (positively charged), neutrons (no charge), and electrons (negatively charged).
Protons are the only positively charged particles in an atom.
Yes, the nucleus of an atom is positively charged because it contains positively charged protons. Electrons, which are negatively charged, orbit around the nucleus to maintain the overall neutrality of the atom.
Only Protons are positively charged.
A charged atom is an ion. A positively charged version is a cation and a negatively charged one, an anion.
If the atom loses electrons, the atom becomes positively charged because the number of positively charged protons.
protons (positively charged) (+)Neutrons (Uncharged)Electrons (Negatively charged)(-)
Protons are positively charged Electrons are negatively charged and Neutrons have a neutral charge the number of protons and neutrons are equal so the atom has no overall charge
Positively charged protons and neutral neutrons are sub atomic particles found in the nucleus (at the centre) of an atom. Negatively charged electrons are found outside the nucleus of an atom.
In an atom of antimatter, that would be true, in an atom of matter that would be false.