True. The atoms have a proton which has a positive charge and there are same number of electrons with a negative charge. Those two charges cancel each other out and the charge becomes zero. The neutrons do not have any charge.
A neutron has a charge of zero. It is a neutral particle, meaning it has no electrical charge.
Yes. It has both.The definition of "neutral" is zero net charge. Every atom has positive and negative charges among its components. If the atom is 'neutral', then the numbers of positive and negative charges are equal, and the atom's 'net' charge is zero.
Uncharged particles are subatomic particles with zero electrical charge. While protons carry a positive charge and electrons carry a negative charge, the third particle of an atom, the neutron, carries no electric charge, and therefore is described as being electrically neutral.
A regular atom is neutral because it has an equal number of protons, which are positively charged, and electrons, which are negatively charged. The positive and negative charges balance each other out, resulting in no overall charge for the atom.
Water is polar because of its unequal sharing of the electron which makes hydrogen slightly positive in charge and oxygen slightly negative in charge. When this happens, the slightly positive hydrogen atoms attract other slightly negative molecules, and thus, attracting other polar molecules. This cannot happen with nonpolar molecules because their charge is zero.
zero= false, non-zero=true
Yes, neutral atoms have a charge of zero.
zero= false, non-zero=true
False. Gamma rays are photons (light pieces), and have zero charge.
No. That statement is not true. It is false.
Zero. (Ions have charge; atoms are always neutral.)
In C, any non-zero expression is true and any zero expression is false.
false
The neutrals phosphorus carry zero charge atoms.
It is true
Neutral atoms always have a net charge of 0(zero).
If you subtract zero from 67 the difference will be 67 so it is true.