When the atom gets bigger. Bigger atoms mean more protons in the nucleus. You can find out the number of protons by looking at a Periodic Table, it's the bottom number of each element.
This is because the nucleus is positively charged (containing protons and neutrons) so the more protons there are, the more positively charged it will become.
The neutron is the particle in the atomic nucleus that carries no charge.
An atomic nucleus has a positive charge.
the nucleus is made of protons and neutrons together. the protons have a positive charge and the neutrons have no charge [electrons circle the nucleus and have a negative charge]
Because protons have a positive charge and neutrons have no charge, the atomic nucleus has a positive charge.
The charge of the atomic nucleus is positive and dependent on the number of protons.
The positive charge of the atomic nucleus is given by the number of protons.
Assuming the context of this question is atomic physics, the answer is "false" for two reasons: 1) the atomic nucleus is positively charged. 2) the atomic nucleus a tightly bound composite of many particles.
An atomic nucleus is made up of protons and neutrons. Each proton has a charge of +1, whereas neutrons have no charge. Bromine has an atomic number of 35, and a nucleus containing 35 protons, therefore a charge of +35.
The charge of an atomic nucleus is positive because it contains protons, which have a positive charge. This positive charge is equal in magnitude to the total number of protons in the nucleus, causing the nucleus to overall carry a positive charge.
The atomic nucleus itself has a positive charge. The protons in the nucleus also have a positive charge (the neutrons are neutral). Both protons and neutrons contain "up" quarks, which have a positive charge (the "down" quarks have a negative charge).
The positively charged particles in an atomic nucleus are protons.
This partice is called atomic nucleus.