All protons have a positive charge. The antimatter equivelant to the proton, the antiproton, has a negative charge. Every element of matter (hydrogen, helium, etc.) has an equivalent antimatter element (antihydrogen, antihelium, etc.) and just as every element of matter has a proton in its the nucleus (which, again, is positively charged), every corresponding anti-element has an anti-proton in its nucleus (which is negatively charged).
There are also theoretical "hybrid" elements (called exotic elements of atoms) consisting of both matter an antimatter components, such as a proton and antiproton orbitting each other (this is called Protonium).
yes
A proton has a positive charge which is equal in magnitude but opposite to the charge on an electron, which is negative.
protons-positive neutrons-neutral electrons-negative
No, a proton is a positively-charged particle with a mass of 1.673 x 10-27 kg. What you described is a neutron.
The number of protons defines the element.
An "anti-proton".
An electron? No, the Anti-proton is the negative charged opposite of the positively charged Proton.
protons are positively charged subatomic particles.
Proton.
yes
A Proton has a positive charge.A Electron has a negative charge.A Neutron has no charge.
In the atom proton is positively charged and the electron is negatively charged.
Protons are positive charged particles. Electrons are negative charged particles.
proton
The proton is positive, the neutron is neutral and the electron is negative.
A particle that has a Positive charge is called the "proton" Proton=positive Electron=negative Neutron=neutral
proton