The water is a neutral substance but the molecule is polar.
A neutron doesn't have an electrical charge; its electric charge is zero.
The total electric charge is always zero.
some is positive and some are negative and some are neutral and thats how there differ
In chemistry, particles with an overall electric charge are called ions.
An atom that is not an ion has no electric charge. If it is particles that make up the atom you speak of, the nucleus houses the neutron; an elementary particle with zero charge.
Yup, an electric charge is generated.
The water itself does.
Yes, water is not an electrolyte. Electrolytes are minerals that carry an electric charge and are found in fluids inside and outside of cells in the body. Water, on the other hand, is a neutral substance that does not carry an electric charge on its own.
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The electric charge of an antineutron is zero, as it is an antiparticle of a neutron which has no electric charge.
The kinds of electric charge are positive charge and negative charge
A stationary electric charge is called an electric static charge.
Sugar (sucrose) is a material that dissolves in water but does not conduct electric current. Sugar molecules do not ionize in water, so the solution does not carry electric charge.
It might be possible to characterize an electric charge as a current -- if that charge is moving. Any moving charge is electricity under the fundamental definition of that term. Electricity is generally thought of as moving electrons, but a more fundamental definition of electricity is any moving charge or group of charges. If your electric charge is moving, it is electric current.
An electron has a negative electric charge.
Water is attracted to a charged balloon because the balloon's electric charge creates an electric field that polarizes the water molecules, causing them to be attracted to the balloon.
Every electric charge is surrounded by an electric field.