Electrons are sub atomic particles and they are matter as they have mass and electric charge.
A positron is the antiparticle of an electron; in other words, it is an alternate name for the "anti-electron". Therefore, a positron would anihilate with an electron. I am not sure about the "why".
Vibrator
Motion: Usually from the ambient matter in the form of heat. If the ambient matter is cooler than the atom, the motion will slow down, and if it's warmer, the electron will accelerate. Rotation: The electron is negatively charged and the nucleus is positively charged. Because of this, the electron is magnetically attracted to the nucleus, so the motion will be concentrated around it.
No. An electron is a fundamental particle with a charge of -1 Coulomb. People say it's a fundamental particle because nobody knows what makes up an electron. Protons and Neutrons are made of quarks, but we can't smash an electron apart yet. A positive electron is called a positron, which is the anti-matter equivalent to an electron. The positron was the first evidence of anti-matter ever found.
a neutron, a proton is positively charged and an electron is negatively charged :)
An electron is a subatomic particle.
Electron Magnetic Waves will propagate in the absence of matter
By electron having low speed, it means when electron travels through a good vacuum with no block of matter nearby thus having less distraction, eg-electron passing through an old fashioned television. But by electron having high speed, it means when electron travels on a rough vacuum and with blocks of matter . So that when they are been extracted from matter, more force are added their by being very fast. Eg-electron comming out of an electron gun. innocent somtoo madonna
Nutron, Electron or Proton
The electron is the sub-atomic particle that orbits the nucleus of an atom of matter. For anti-matter the sub-atomic particle that orbits the nucleus is the anti-electron (positron).
There aren't any. Even the smallest particle of the dark matter theory, the axion, is quadrillions of times more dense than an electron.
An electron is very small. So small that you cant even see it with an electron microscope (because it uses electron to detect itself). It's mass is tiny. Billions of times less than a kg. It's just one type of matter. Some estimates put the number of electrons in the universes at greater than 10100. So no, the universe is not an electron.
An electron is the carrier of the negative electrostatic force, and it has a charge of -1. Also, the electron, along with the proton and neutron, are the "basic building blocks" of atoms, and they make up the matter all around us. The positron, on the other hand, is an anti-electron - it's antimatter! And it is the antiparticle of the electron. It has a charge of +1, which is just the opposite of the electron's. The fact that the electron and positron are matter and anti-matter, and that they have a charge of -1 and +1 respectively are the major differences. A positron is an electron's anti-particle, and when the electron and positron come in contact with each other to combine, they annihilate each other in a process called electron-positron annihilation. There is a link below to that related question and to a couple of others.
Electron
i dont know people
Plasma
Electron