Proton's have a positive charge, neutron'shave a neutral charge, electron's have a negative charge
Proton - positive charge (+) Neutron - neutral charge (0) Electron - negative charge (-)
For the particles in atoms: Neutron: Charge: neutral Electron: Charge: negative Proton: Charge: positive
1 proton and 1 electron make a hydrogen atom. The proton carries a positive charge, and the electron carries a negative charge, creating a stable neutral atom.
No. A neutron is neutral, while a proton has a positive charge. Incidentally, an electron has a negative charge.
Your question is a bit confusing but a neutron is ALWAYS neutral. If a molecule loses an electron it moves toward the "positive charge" catagory, but it depends on the molecule.
Proton's have a positive charge, neutron'shave a neutral charge, electron's have a negative charge
Proton's have a positive charge, neutron'shave a neutral charge, electron's have a negative charge
proton positive neutron neutral electron negative
Proton, neutron, and electron. A proton has a positive charge. A neutron is neutral (no charge) and an electron has a negative charge.
Because the proton has a positive charge and neutral has a neutral!They need a negative and it came the electron!
Proton - positive charge (+) Neutron - neutral charge (0) Electron - negative charge (-)
A neutral hydrogen atom consists of a single proton in its nucleus and a single electron orbiting the nucleus. The proton carries a positive charge, while the electron carries a negative charge. The overall charge of the neutral hydrogen atom is zero due to the equal and opposite charges of the proton and electron.
There is zero net charge as the proton (+ve) and electron (-ve) cancel each other out and the neutron is neutral.
Charge of electron is negative and charge of proton is positive and charge of neutron is neutral because it contains proton and neutron
neutron
The Proton carries a Positive charge. An Electron has a Negative charge, and a Neutron has no charge … it's Neutral.