emits radio wave photon.
An electron? No, the Anti-proton is the negative charged opposite of the positively charged Proton.
Yes, a proton is a subatomic particle that carries a charge equal to but opposite to that of an electron. The proton has a positive charge, and the electron has a negative charge.
One electron balances the charge on one proton. Their charges are equal and opposite.
Yes, an example of an electrostatic force acting in an atom is a proton attracting an electron. This attraction occurs due to the opposite charges of the proton (positive) and the electron (negative), leading to the electrostatic force of attraction between them.
Yes. A proton has the same magnitude of charge as an electron, but the charge is of the opposite sign.
The force exerted by a proton on a proton and a proton on an electron at the same distance will be the same in magnitude but opposite in direction, due to Newton's third law of motion. This is because both protons and electrons have the same charge but opposite signs, leading to an equal and opposite force.
An electron? No, the Anti-proton is the negative charged opposite of the positively charged Proton.
The proton will have greater acceleration. This is because the proton has a higher charge to mass ratio than the alpha particle. The proton has a +1 charge, as you know, and the alpha particle has a +2 charge because it has 2 protons in it. But the alpha particle also has a pair of neutrons fuesed to those 2 protons, so it has a 2 to 4 charge to mass ratio. The proton, with its 1 to 1 ratio of charge to mass, will have a greater acceleration in the same electric field.
A proton and an electron have exactly opposite charges. If you take the charge of a proton as +1, then an electron has a charge of -1.
They have opposite charges.
First of all, the forces they experience would be in exactly the opposite directions. Secondly, because the mass of the proton is greater, it would have a lower acceleration than the electron.
No. The opposite of an electron is an antielectron or positron, which has exactly the same mass but opposite charge. A proton has opposite charge from that of an electron, but it is about 1836 times more massive.
Yes, a proton is a subatomic particle that carries a charge equal to but opposite to that of an electron. The proton has a positive charge, and the electron has a negative charge.
A proton has a positive charge which is equal in magnitude but opposite to the charge on an electron, which is negative.
Both have equal and opposite charges.
A proton never changes to an electron just as a dog never changes to a cat, they are completely different things really. In beta decay a neutron may decay into a proton and emit and electron and an anti-neutrino but that is about it.
The charge of the proton is +1. The charge of the electron is -1. They are equal but opposite.