nothing, they both even out!
No. Charge must always be conserved.
No. The electron and proton have the same amount of charge. Its just that the electron's charge is negative and the proton's charge is positive.
A proton has a positive charge.
proton positive neutron neutral electron negative
There is zero net charge as the proton (+ve) and electron (-ve) cancel each other out and the neutron is neutral.
No. Charge must always be conserved.
No. The electron and proton have the same amount of charge. Its just that the electron's charge is negative and the proton's charge is positive.
The charge of a proton is positive, while the charge of an electron is negative.
Proton's have a positive charge, neutron'shave a neutral charge, electron's have a negative charge
A proton has a positive charge which is equal in magnitude but opposite to the charge on an electron, which is negative.
Proton's have a positive charge, neutron'shave a neutral charge, electron's have a negative charge
A proton has a positive charge of +1 An electron has a negative charge of -1 An neutron has no charge
A proton and an electron have exactly opposite charges. If you take the charge of a proton as +1, then an electron has a charge of -1.
An electron? No, the Anti-proton is the negative charged opposite of the positively charged Proton.
remove either a proton or electron OR add a proton or electron...
Proton, neutron, and electron. A proton has a positive charge. A neutron is neutral (no charge) and an electron has a negative charge.
No, the absolute charge of proton is equal to the absolute charge of electrons. however, their relative charge is opposite in sign.