They attract because they are of opposite charge.
A neutron is neutral, so it neither attracts nor repels any sort of particle.
Attract since they got 2 opposite charges :)
"Opposites attract". So two electrons repel each other.
A proton has positive charge and an electron has negative. They pull/attract for this very reason. Like-charges repel, and opposites attract. Think of magnets! When you put the same poles close to one another, what happens? They repel and they don't want to stick. But what happens when you put the south pole near the north pole? They pull and attract!
The is a law of nature, like charges repel, unlike attract.
repel
Like charges do not attract each other, they repel each other.
No, they repel each other.
Early experiments were based off attraction. The neutron had no charge to attract or repel or to be attracted or repelled. so these experiments could not figure out that there was a neutral particle in the nucleus.
bcoz as we all clearly knw that neutron has no charge so when it strikes a gas atom it can not attract or repel the proton or electron from it so it passes by it untouched............
I believe it would be Attract depending on how you use Repel.
like forces repel, unlike forces attract(:
they repel. opposites attract!
"Opposites attract". So two electrons repel each other.
Yes, repel is the opposite of attract.
No, it would just be like changing the word. Like charges would still repel and opposite charges will still attract.
A proton has positive charge and an electron has negative. They pull/attract for this very reason. Like-charges repel, and opposites attract. Think of magnets! When you put the same poles close to one another, what happens? They repel and they don't want to stick. But what happens when you put the south pole near the north pole? They pull and attract!
Like charges repel one another.
They repel.