When something is electrically neutral it has neither a positive nor a negative charge.
Sodium chloride, NaCl, for example is of neutral pH and conductive in solution or in molten state. It is a salt.
Yes it does, via the neutral wire.
Neutral in electricity in India is the zero current phase wire that provides a return path to the current. If it is a 3-phase star connection then the common point to which all the phases are connected becomes the neutral. It may or may not have a ground potential depending on phase balance. Generally neutral has zero potential as all the phases are 120 electrical degrees apart and thus electrically balanced. But in casee of a fault the neutral voltage may exceed the ground potential which may be harmful. Therefore it is preferred to ground the neutral to avoid accidents.
After electrical discharges in static electricity, the source typically returns to a neutral state. This occurs because the excess charge, whether negative or positive, is balanced out by the discharge, allowing the charges to equalize. As a result, the source stabilizes back to its original neutral condition.
no they do not conduct because they are neutral things
yes
The definition of neutral means the object has no charge.
Not necessarily. An object can be neutral if it has an equal amount of positive and negative charges, canceling each other out. However, an object with no static electricity might still have an imbalance of charges and not necessarily be neutral.
There would be power there because the "neutral" is the path electricity mostly used to return to its source. All electricity has to return to its source somehow.
It is the same as phase to neutral. As the neutral is earthed at the electricity suppliers transformer.
Probably neutral.
First of all you spelled "electricity" wrong. Electricity is everywhere, everything has a a positive, neutral or negative charge.
Sodium chloride, NaCl, for example is of neutral pH and conductive in solution or in molten state. It is a salt.
because cotton materials are relatively neutral
When an object discharges static electricity, it returns to a neutral state. This means it has neither a positive nor negative charge and is once again at equilibrium with its surroundings.
To feel neutral is to feel nothing.
It means the neutral is not grounded.