The net electrical charge of an atom is zero because it contains an equal number of protons(+) and electrons (-)
There is also a neutrons in the nucleus of an atom, however as the name suggests, it is if NO charge (neutral).
The atom's nucleus is positively charged, with the number of positive charges being equal to the atom's atomic number.The nucleus contains positive protons and neutral neutrons making it positive.There are no negatives because electrons are not in the nucleus, but around the nucleus.
The Electrons and the Protons.
The atom's electrical charge is +4. It has 15 protons and 11 electrons, so the overall charge is positive (15 - 11 = 4) because there are more protons than electrons. Electrons have a negative charge, so having fewer electrons than protons results in a net positive charge.
'-3' It is not an atom, when it is a charged species, but an ION. 15 protons (15+) 18 electrons (18-) Hence +15 - 18 = -3 The charge. By the numbers given , this is the element Phosphorus. , which can exhibit a 'P^(-3) ion.
The nucleus of an atom does have a positive charge, yes. If you're asking what particle is in the nucleus and has a positive charge, "proton" is probably the answer you're looking for. (There are more esoteric possible answers if we're liberal about our terms.)
A sodium atom contains eleven electrons and has a net neutral electrical charge, because the atom also contains eleven protons. A sodium ion contains only ten electrons and has an electrical charge of +1, because it also contains 11 protons.
The atom's nucleus is positively charged, with the number of positive charges being equal to the atom's atomic number.The nucleus contains positive protons and neutral neutrons making it positive.There are no negatives because electrons are not in the nucleus, but around the nucleus.
If there is an imbalance in the numbers of protons in electrons, then yes, an atom would have electrical charge.
A free atom has no electrical charge because it has an equal number of protons and electrons. Each proton has a single positive charge, and each electron has a single negative charge. These balance each other and the result is a net neutral atom (or no net charge).
it has a neutral charge because it contains an equal number of protons and electrons
A charged atom is an ion: cation (positive electrical charge) or anion (negative electrical charge). Cations: H+, Na+, Ca2+ Anions: OH-, (SO4)2-, (NO3)-
An atom is electrically neutral because it contains an equal number of positively charged protons in the nucleus and negatively charged electrons orbiting around the nucleus. The positive charge of the protons cancels out the negative charge of the electrons, resulting in an overall neutral charge for the atom.
Yes, a nucleus is positively charged because it contains protons, which are positively charged particles. Electrons, which are negatively charged, surround the nucleus to balance out the overall charge of an atom.
An atom that carries an electrical charge because it has gained or lost electrons is called an "ion". An atom that has gained one or more electrons, and has a negative electrical charge, is called an "anion". An atom that has lost one or more electrons, and has a positive electrical charge, is called a "cation". The term "ion" is used to refer to both cations and anions collectively or non-specifically.
A neutral atom hasn't an electrical charge.
That's because it contains protons, that have a positive charge.
no it has a nutral charge because in the middle of protons and electrons there is nuetrons. nuetrons have a nutral charge and so does the atom.