Friction.
Yes, small pieces of tissue paper would likely stick to a rubbed balloon because the balloon becomes charged with static electricity when rubbed, creating an attractive force between the balloon and the tissue paper. This attraction is due to the transfer of electrons from one surface to another, resulting in static cling between the two materials.
Rub two samples of food nicely on a clean sheet of paper. Let the paper dry for some time. Then put the paper in front of a bright light. The paper on which food containing fat was rubbed, would have a little glow(it looks like the paper is a little wet). The other paper, on which the food containing no fat was rubbed, would not look like that.Note: The paper must not be too thick.
Yes, pencils need friction in order to write. The friction between the pencil lead and the surface of the paper allows the lead to leave a mark as it rubs off onto the paper. Without friction, the pencil lead would not be able to transfer onto the paper.
An attendance book, books, crayons, colored pencils, desks, kids, markers, notebooks, overhead, pencils, paper, paperclips, paper towels, smart board, sharpener, text books, teacher, whiteboards, I think you get it now.
No, pencils do require friction to write. When a pencil is pressed against paper, the friction between the graphite tip and the paper surface causes the graphite to leave a mark. Without this friction, the pencil would not be able to write.
The answer depends on how many people there are and in what order distribute them out.
A gross is 144. So you would have 144 pencils.
288 pencils in 36 boxes, would mean 8 pencils in each box. If you had 288 pencils in each of 36 boxes, you would a total of 10,368 pencils.
No, a steel spoon rubbed with a woolen cloth will not attract bits of paper. This is because the steel spoon is not charged with static electricity through the rubbing process. The woolen cloth, however, can become charged with static electricity due to the friction between the wool fibers. This static charge is not transferred to the steel spoon in a way that would attract bits of paper.
They would be 2.10
You would probably need: Pencils/Erasers Pens Notebooks Portable Pencil Sharpeners Dry Erase Markers Glue Crayons Markers Colored Pencils Notebook Paper Highlighters Folders Tissues Construction Paper Manilla Paper Optional: Hand Sanitizer White Out Calculator Binder Dividers Stapler/Staples Tape
The paper bits would be neutral in charge. If the wooden plate has been rubbed against another material, it could acquire an opposite charge, potentially leading to the paper bits being attracted or repelled by the wooden plate.