There are only three types of Subatomic particle
The electron is a subatomic particle that has a charge of -1.
The nuclear particle that has no charge is the neutron.
A Neutron is a particle that holds no charge. A Proton holds a positive charge, and an electron holds a negative charge.
The proton is the subatomic particle of the atom that carries a positive charge.
The net charge of an object or particle can be determined by adding up the positive and negative charges present on the object or particle. If the total positive charges are greater than the total negative charges, the object or particle has a positive net charge. If the total negative charges are greater, it has a negative net charge. If the positive and negative charges are equal, the object or particle has a neutral net charge.
An ion has a net electrical charge; a nonionic particle that is at least as large as an atom does not.
The subatomic particle with a negative charge is the electron.
The alpha particle has a charge of +2e, where e is the elementary charge of a proton. This means the alpha particle has a positive charge of twice the charge of a single proton.
A proton (H+) is the smallest particle with a positive charge.
The electron is a subatomic particle that has a charge of -1.
The electric charge of an alpha particle is positive. An alpha particle is a helium nucleus (which being a nucleus has a positive charge)
The nuclear particle that has no charge is the neutron.
A proton (H+) is the smallest particle with a positive charge.
Electrons have a charge of -1, protons have a charge of +1.
No charge
Neutrons are particles of no charge. Electrons have negative charge.
The electrical charge is not a particle.