The charged body will induce a separation of charges in the uncharged body.
The charged body will induce a separation of charges in the uncharged body.
The charged body will induce a separation of charges in the uncharged body.
The charged body will induce a separation of charges in the uncharged body.
The charged body will induce a separation of charges in the uncharged body.The charged body will induce a separation of charges in the uncharged body.The charged body will induce a separation of charges in the uncharged body.The charged body will induce a separation of charges in the uncharged body.
If an electrically uncharged body is contacted by an electrically charge body then the uncharged body will gain a charge. This is because electricity flows from a higher concentration to a lower concentration and will balance out.
The uncharged body becomes polarized in the presence of the charged body, with its positive end facing the charged body. This causes a repulsive force to arise between the like charges, resulting in the uncharged body being repelled by the charged body.
The uncharged body will become positively charged after being brought into contact with a positively charged body, as electrons will flow from the uncharged body to the positively charged body until they reach equilibrium.
When a charged object is brought close to an uncharged object, they attract each other due to electrostatic forces. This is because the charged object induces a separation of charges in the uncharged object, leading to a polarization that results in an attractive force between the two objects.
develop the same charge as the charged body
A charged object will attract or repel an uncharged object through the electrostatic force. The direction of the attraction or repulsion depends on the types of charges involved (positive or negative) on the objects.
When a balloon is charged, it gains an excess of either positive or negative charge. An uncharged balloon is neutral, so it does not exert any electrostatic force. The charged balloon is then attracted to the uncharged balloon due to the electrostatic force between them, as opposite charges attract each other.
Charged objects can attract or repel each other based on their charges: opposite charges attract and like charges repel. Charged objects can also induce a charge in uncharged objects through a process called induction, causing them to be either attracted or repelled depending on the situation.
the three laws of charges are unlike charge attract, like charge repel, and charged objects attract uncharged (neutral) objects.
At the beginning of the lab, the foil is uncharged.
When a charged rod is brought near an uncharged metal object, it induces a separation of charges within the metal object causing the electrons to move away from the charged rod. This separation of charges creates an attractive force between the charged rod and the metal object, leading to the repulsion of the metal object.