Electrical charge is a basic property of some particles that exist in our world, indeed in the whole universe.
According to Coulomb's Law there is a force between charges. This force is associated with potential energy contained in an electric field. This electrical potential is called voltage.
When voltage is present, electrically charged particles move (unless prevented from doing so) due to the forces they "feel." The flow of charge is known as electrical current.
The particle with an electric charge is called the proton. It makes up part of an atoms nucleus.
I believe it does. From what I know, I think it makes a NUTURAL charge, but I can't be sure.
The property that makes up electric charge is called just that: "electric charge". Note that the particles also have other properties.
The electric charge of an antineutron is zero, as it is an antiparticle of a neutron which has no electric charge.
The kinds of electric charge are positive charge and negative charge
A stationary electric charge is called an electric static charge.
static charge
potatoes have salt and water which makes ions when are mixed. Ions are groups of atoms that make an electric net that has a positive and negative charge like a battery. Batteries charges things so why not a potato?
The electric charge of a muon is -1 elementary charge, which is the same as the charge of an electron.
An electron has a negative electric charge.
Every electric charge is surrounded by an electric field.
The presence of charge creates an electric field. The electric field is just a convenient quantity of how much another charge would move *if* it were placed near the first charge.