In a neutral atom, both charges are equal.It makes atom stable.
Not all objects have a charge. Objects can be neutral, meaning they have an equal amount of positive and negative charges that cancel each other out. Only objects that have an unequal distribution of positive and negative charges will have a net charge.
As equal amount of positive and negative charges are there then the net charge on the object is the algebraical sum of them and hence it becomes zero. So chargeless.
No, not all matter has a negative or positive charge. Matter can be neutral, meaning it has an equal number of positive and negative charges, such as in most atoms. Charged particles exist in matter, such as electrons with a negative charge and protons with a positive charge.
All electrons have a negative charge yes.
Yes and no - an atom has no charge - it is neutral because it contains equal numbers of positive and negative charges. A neutron has no charge at all, ever.
The positive and negative charges are equal in magnitude (absolute value).
The sum of all charges in a formula for an ionic compound must equal zero. This is because the compound is neutral overall, so the total positive charges from the cations must balance out the total negative charges from the anions.
Because there are equal numbers of protons and neutron so the charges cancel out. The ones that are charged are charged because of the electrons, or lack of them, nothing to do with the nucleii.
Basically, all matter is made up of positive and negative electric charges. In many cases, the positive and negative charges cancel one another, so that the object appears to be neutral on a large scale, to the outside - or it may be closely enough balanced so as to appear to be neutral. In other cases, there may be a net positive or a net negative charge. Please note that there are indeed particles, such as the photon, the neutrino, and the (as-yet hypothetical) graviton, that have no electric charge.
An atom consists of a sphere of positive charge with negatively charged electron embedded in it,The positive and the negative charges in an atom are equal in magnitude, due to which an atom is electrically neutral. It has no over all negative or positive charge.
False. While objects are made up of tiny particles such as atoms and molecules, not all of them necessarily have electric charges. Some particles are neutral, meaning they have an equal number of positive and negative charges and cancel each other out.
Protons and electrons are the two charges that all matter is made up of. Protons have a positive charge, while electrons have a negative charge.