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i dont know if you said hehehheheeh
It would be very difficult unless it was made out of all metal. Carry a quarter with you and touch it to metal to discharge static. Isn't that shocking?
yes a bigger balloon produce more static electricity.Why will because it has more space to carry more static electricity.There you go i answered your question.
Static electricity is a form of electricity that does not flow: it is electricity at rest. Objects carry positive electric charges when some of their atoms have fewer electrons than they should, and they carry negative electric charges when some of the atoms have more electrons than they should. An easy way to produce static electricity is to rub two objects (made of certain materials) together: this transfers electrons from one item to another, giving each a positive or negative charge. Positively and negatively charged objects are attracted to each other like magnets-because each wants to shed or acquire electrons. When static electricity becomes powerful enough, so many electrons jump from one thing to another that they cause a visible electric spark, which you will feel as a little "shock" if one of the things the electrons jump to you! (Loose electrons can attach to atoms in the surface of your skin.) Lightning, in fact, is really just a giant spark that results when static electricity builds up in a cloud during a thunderstorm.
Eels
Clouds carry a massive amount of static which is discharged as lightning.
not at all
No, static electricity is the same on any type of hair.
yes
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Electrons carry electricity within an atom.
i dont know if you said hehehheheeh
It would be very difficult unless it was made out of all metal. Carry a quarter with you and touch it to metal to discharge static. Isn't that shocking?
yes a bigger balloon produce more static electricity.Why will because it has more space to carry more static electricity.There you go i answered your question.
Electricity is the movement of electrons, which carry a negative charge. The quantity of charge is called the Coulomb. In a circuit carrying a current I, this means that a charge of I coulombs is being transferred every second. Electricity can also be static, such as the charge produced on some materials when rubbed, in which case the amount of static electricity held is again measured in coulombs. See Wikipedia entry for Coulomb
Static electricity is a form of electricity that does not flow: it is electricity at rest. Objects carry positive electric charges when some of their atoms have fewer electrons than they should, and they carry negative electric charges when some of the atoms have more electrons than they should. An easy way to produce static electricity is to rub two objects (made of certain materials) together: this transfers electrons from one item to another, giving each a positive or negative charge. Positively and negatively charged objects are attracted to each other like magnets-because each wants to shed or acquire electrons. When static electricity becomes powerful enough, so many electrons jump from one thing to another that they cause a visible electric spark, which you will feel as a little "shock" if one of the things the electrons jump to you! (Loose electrons can attach to atoms in the surface of your skin.) Lightning, in fact, is really just a giant spark that results when static electricity builds up in a cloud during a thunderstorm.