Yes, if the cage rotor is made of trigonic neoprosydeum, and is mounted on a turntable. Interesting enough, a standard cage rotor composed of more conventional metals actually absorbs some of the radially divergent temporal field that would normally be produced by the squirrel, thus reducing said squirrels flux transductance to the level of a typical mouse, or possibly a hamster. So don't perform this experiment unless you would like his unicorn friends to get all pokey on you.
In practical life , it is not possible to identify the negative and positive charges.The positive and negative charges are identified only experimentally.So, practical example of this is not possible.But I can tell that a negatively charged object and positively charged object attract each other.for A+ lost electrons
No - atoms are always neutral. The number of protons is balanced by a equal number of electrons. Ions, on the other hand, may be positively or negatively charged, depending on whether they have lost or gained electrons.
The only possible charges of ions are whole numbers that result from gaining or losing electrons. For example, common charges include +1, +2, +3 for cations (positively charged ions) and -1, -2, -3 for anions (negatively charged ions).
No, it is not possible for an atom to have no electrons after forming an ionic bond. When an ionic bond forms, one atom donates electrons to another, resulting in the formation of charged ions. While the atom that loses electrons becomes a positively charged ion (cation), it still retains at least one electron, as completely losing all electrons would not be stable or viable for an atom.
The movement of electrons, which are negatively charged, can create regions of varying charge due to their displacement. When electrons move away from a neutral atom or material, it leaves behind a positively charged ion or region, resulting in a net positive charge. Conversely, if additional electrons accumulate in a material, it can become negatively charged. Thus, the relative movement of these negative charges alters the overall charge distribution, producing both positively and negatively charged materials.
1. I am not sure whether he said that; it seems to have become some sort of vogue to attribute all sorts of weird things to him. 2. Whether he said it or not, time travel isn't likely to happen in any way. Certainly not by something as simple as a rotating magnet - rotating magnets have been used for at least a century, and so far, there have been no reports on time travel.
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A laser printer uses a laser-beam that projects an image of the page to be printed onto an electrically charged rotating drum.
It is impossible; even a solar flashlight need to be charged under the sun.
Black holes are a natural consequence of the theory of relativity. Actually, even before that, a few scientists considered that it might be possible for an object to be so massive that not even light could escape from it, but the first rigorous treatment was done by Karl Schwarzschild in 1916. At the time it was considered a purely mathematical curiosity, but in the late 1950s and throughout the 1960s others showed that it was at least physically plausible for a black hole to actually exist, and derived solutions for rotating and/or charged black holes (Schwarzschild's solution was for a non-rotating, non-charged black hole).
Electricity involves charged particles. An electric current involves the movement of charged particles. These charged particles MAY be electrons, and often are; but it is possible to have an electric current with many other types of charged particles.
Altenator is not charging battery!!
Yes, it is possible to order something online and not get charged for it due to technical errors or glitches in the payment system.
Yes, it is possible to be charged for murder without a body if there is enough evidence to prove that a person was killed, even if the body has not been found.
I don't know. Possible.
Possible words include:onions - a root food and seasoninganions - positively charged particles
It is possible, yes.