They attract because they are of opposite charge.
"Opposites attract". So two electrons repel each other.
Like charges do not attract each other, they 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!
They will repel each other. When ebonite is rubbed, it becomes negatively charged, causing the pieces to repel due to the like charges on each surface.
Opposite charges attract because they have an electrostatic force that pulls them together, whereas like charges repel because they have a force that pushes them apart. This behavior is due to the exchange of virtual photons between the charged particles, leading to the creation of an electric field.
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.
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.
Like charges repel one another.
repel
They repel.
If the atoms have opposite charges (positive to negative) they will attract. If the atoms have the same charges (positive to positive or negative to negative) then they will repel. You can look at the Law of Electric Charges to get more information on this.
All of the metals attract and repel, but if a: negative and positive come together= attract positve and a negative come together= attract negative and negative come together= repel positive and positive come together= repel
Each electron has a single negative charge. Objects with like charges repel each other. Therefore two electrons following parallel tracks will repel, not attract, each other.