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A static discharge is an accumulation of static electricity that discharges when negative electrons connect with the positive protons.
"Negative" and "positive" are terms used with electrical forces, not with magnetic forces."Negative" and "positive" are terms used with electrical forces, not with magnetic forces."Negative" and "positive" are terms used with electrical forces, not with magnetic forces."Negative" and "positive" are terms used with electrical forces, not with magnetic forces.
No electric charges may be positive or negative - electrons have a negative charge; ions have a positive charge.
Protons are positive,Electrons are negative
Negative to positive.
Positive and negative poles
electricity can travel through anything with a positive and negative electrical charge
Conventional Electrical theory (simplified) states that electricity flows from positive to negative in contrast to Electron Theory which supposes negative to positive flow of electrons.
A static discharge is an accumulation of static electricity that discharges when negative electrons connect with the positive protons.
It is positive to negative.
It goes negative to positive.
That is the electric energy. It is called the electricity
False. 1. Electricity involves the movement of electrical charges. The most common case is the movement of electrons (a negative charge), but other possibilities exist, such as movement of charges through ions (positive or negative), or holes (positive). 2. Even stating that electricity IS a flow of charged particles is a gross and misleading simplification. An electrical current INVOLVES the flow of charges, but that does not fully describe an electrical current.
"Negative" and "positive" are terms used with electrical forces, not with magnetic forces."Negative" and "positive" are terms used with electrical forces, not with magnetic forces."Negative" and "positive" are terms used with electrical forces, not with magnetic forces."Negative" and "positive" are terms used with electrical forces, not with magnetic forces.
An electrical charge can be one of two opposites, which are traditionally called "positive" and "negative". If there is no charge on an object, the object is said to be "neutral".
No, neutrons does not have any sort of electrical charge. They have neither positive nor negative charges.
No electric charges may be positive or negative - electrons have a negative charge; ions have a positive charge.