No. Bonds formed between two ions of opposite charge are called ionic bonds. Covalent bonds are bonds between atoms of similar electronegativity, that share a pair (or multiple pairs) of electrons. Ions form ionic bonds, not covalent bonds.
They stem from the nucleus of an atom. The atom is composed of electrons, which emit a negative charge, protons which emit positive charges and neutrons which have a neutral charge. When an atom, had a plus positive or minus negative charged, it is called an ion. ion because it either has an extra electron giving it a negative charge, or its missing an electron, giving it a positive charge
Because in an unbalanced system, the positive end a positive charge, and the negaticve end has a negative charge. Though current (which is reletive to the "positiveness" of an area) flows from positive to negative, electrons flow from negative to positive.
the positive and negative charges in clouds are the protons and electrons formed from the friction of the water that condensated to make the cloud.
Yes, the positively charged hydrogen ends (or hydrogens) of water molecules can attract negatively charged chloride ions. This attraction occurs due to the electrostatic forces between the opposite charges, leading to the formation of hydrogen bonds between water molecules and chloride ions.
Outside the dubious field of magnetic therapists, the terms 'positive' and 'negative' are not applied to magnetic polarities. Furthermore, we do not describe magnetic polarity as a 'charge'. However, magnetic poles and electric charges follow the same rule -i.e. like poles repel while unlike poles attract.
In electricity, the attraction or repulsion between electric charges is known as electrostatic force. This force is governed by Coulomb's Law, which describes how the force between two charges depends on their magnitudes and the distance between them. Positive charges attract negative charges, while like charges (positive-positive or negative-negative) repel each other.
Like charges repel each other (positive-positive or negative-negative), while opposite charges attract (positive-negative or negative-positive). The strength of the force of attraction or repulsion between charges depends on their magnitudes and the distance between them, following Coulomb's law.
Charged particles experience attraction if they have opposite charges (positive and negative) and repulsion if they have the same charge (positive-positive or negative-negative). This is governed by Coulomb's law, which states that the force between charged particles is directly proportional to the product of their charges and inversely proportional to the square of the distance between them.
The attraction or repulsion between two objects is determined by the type of charges they possess. Objects with opposite charges (e.g., positive and negative) will attract each other, while objects with the same charges (e.g., two positive or two negative) will repel each other. This attraction or repulsion is due to the electromagnetic force between the charges.
The attraction or repulsion that unlike or like charges have is due to the electrostatic force. Like charges (positive-positive or negative-negative) repel each other, while unlike charges (positive-negative) attract each other. This force is governed by Coulomb's law and is responsible for the interactions between charged particles.
they will attract if they have equal and opposite charges, such as Na and Cl
Yes, positive charges repel negative charges due to the electrostatic force of attraction or repulsion between them. This force is described by Coulomb's Law and follows the principle that like charges repel each other.
The pull of positive and negative charges between the two bodies, an electrical or magnetic force.
Because the charges are equal in magnitude, the attraction is simultaneous.
Neither charge on its own has an attractive force. Opposite charges (positive-negative) will attract while like charges (negative-negative or positive-positive) will repel.
Yes, the electromagnetic force between a positive and a negative charge is attractive. The positive charge will be pulled towards the negative charge due to the force of attraction between opposite charges.
The two types of electric force that can occur between two charged objects are attraction and repulsion. Attraction occurs when opposite charges (positive and negative) interact and pull towards each other, while repulsion occurs when like charges (positive and positive, or negative and negative) interact and push away from each other.