Nothing happens. I have amber and wear it with wool and other clothing. At the very most there is friction.
You build a charge when rubbing vinyl with a wool cloth. The wool cloth is very weak in holding electrons so when you rub it with the ebonite rod the electrons transfer onto the rod. The rod is negatively charged (assuming that the rod was neutrally charged). The wool becomes positively charged (assuming that the wool was neutrally charged)
well if you mean felt you get some wool and rub the fibers together until they are tightly packed then u done i think, cuz it's what my tech teacher says hope this helps:)
The paper becomes semi-transparent.
It will just hurt a lot, so I advise you not to do that.
You build a charge The wool cloth is very weak in holding electrons so when you rub it with the ebonite rod the electrons transfer onto the rod. The rod is negativly charged (assuming that the rod was neutrally charged). The wool becomes positivly charged (assuming that the wool was neutrally charged)
Healthy and Wealthy forever
When a cotton shirt and wool sweater rub together, they create friction that can generate static electricity. This can cause the fabrics to stick together or even produce a small spark. The different properties of cotton and wool fibers rubbing together create a charge separation, which results in static electricity.
Rubbing two pieces of wool together creates static electricity. When placed close together, the opposite charges on the wool pieces attract each other, causing them to stick together momentarily due to the static force.
you will die
When you rub amber against cotton, the friction between the materials causes a transfer of electrons, leading to a build-up of static electricity. This results in the amber and cotton becoming electrically charged, with the amber typically gaining a negative charge and the cotton gaining a positive charge.
The ebonite rod will gather a static electric charge, as electrons are transferred.
Friction, resulting in heat
When you rub amber against cotton, a static electric charge is generated due to the triboelectric effect. This occurs as electrons are transferred from one material to the other, resulting in amber gaining a negative charge while the cotton becomes positively charged. The charged amber can then attract lightweight objects, such as small pieces of paper, demonstrating the principles of static electricity.
You build a charge when rubbing vinyl with a wool cloth. The wool cloth is very weak in holding electrons so when you rub it with the ebonite rod the electrons transfer onto the rod. The rod is negatively charged (assuming that the rod was neutrally charged). The wool becomes positively charged (assuming that the wool was neutrally charged)
tsunamis and earthquakes
When you rub one balloon with wool, and then rub another balloon with wool, we can safely assume that both balloons acquire the same kind of charge. So when you try to bring them together, they'll repel each other (push apart).
When we rub two objects together then heat energy is generated.