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Ernest Rutherford concluded that an atom contains a very small, dense center, called a nucleus, with a positive charge as a result of his gold foil experiment.
a nucleus with a positive charge
This occurs because the absolute value of the positive charge of the protons, which are concentrated in the nucleus of the atom, is offset by the negative charge of the electrons also in the atom but more diffusely located outside the nucleus. The absolute values of the charge on a proton and the charge on an electron are equal, but the charge on protons is positive and that on electrons is negative. If an atomic size entity contains no electrons, it is not an atom but a positive ion.
When an object has a positive charge, it has a deficiency of electrons.
It has lost electrons, resulting in a more positive charge.
This is the Rutherford model.
The proton has a positive charge, +1.
The center or Nucleus always carries a Positive Charge
Ernest Rutherford concluded that an atom contains a very small, dense center, called a nucleus, with a positive charge as a result of his gold foil experiment.
No the postive charge is only concentrated in one spot the atom
positive
A proton.
The center, the nucleus.
It is positive as the electrons around it are negative.
Proton.
a nucleus with a positive charge
a nucleus with a positive charge