Yes, and in fact they do. You can easily see this yourself by rubbing a balloon on a sweater and then "sticking" it to a wall.
This happens because of something called "induced dipoles".
Let's say you have an electrically charged object ... negatively charged, for example.
If you bring it near an uncharged object, what happens is that the electrons in the molecules of the uncharged object tend to be repelled by the charged object. They move as far to the opposite side as they can get.
Because the electromagnetic force gets smaller with distance, the uncharged molecules now have a slight net attraction to the charged object, since the part of the molecule that's attracted to the charged object is now closer to the charged object than the part of the molecule that's repelled by it. This means the attractive force is very slightly greater than the repulsive force. For any individual molecule, it's not much, but there are a LOT of molecules in any object large enough to see, and those tiny attractions add up.
A charged object will attract or repel an uncharged object through the electrostatic force. The direction of the attraction or repulsion depends on the types of charges involved (positive or negative) on the objects.
When a charged object is brought close to an uncharged object, they attract each other due to electrostatic forces. This is because the charged object induces a separation of charges in the uncharged object, leading to a polarization that results in an attractive force between the two objects.
A positive charge and an uncharged charge will attract each other. This is because the positive charge will create an electric field that will induce a separation of charges in the neutral object, causing it to become polarized and attract the positive charge.
Cönsider a negatively charged object be placed at a fixed position ,now a neutral or uncharged object is slowly introducing into the field which is produced by the electrons in negatively charged object.... And now according to the law of charges opposite charges attract each other similar thing taking place here the electrons present on the negatively charged object attracts the positive charge in neutral object by separting the charges inside the object wich is called induction as soon as the neutral object enters into the field produce by negatively charged object ...,and then it attracts...
When charges in an uncharged object are rearranged without direct contact with a charged object, it is called charging by induction. This process involves bringing a charged object close to the uncharged object, causing the charges to redistribute within the uncharged object.
A charged object will attract or repel an uncharged object through the electrostatic force. The direction of the attraction or repulsion depends on the types of charges involved (positive or negative) on the objects.
The charged body will induce a separation of charges in the uncharged body.The charged body will induce a separation of charges in the uncharged body.The charged body will induce a separation of charges in the uncharged body.The charged body will induce a separation of charges in the uncharged body.
When a charged object is brought close to an uncharged object, they attract each other due to electrostatic forces. This is because the charged object induces a separation of charges in the uncharged object, leading to a polarization that results in an attractive force between the two objects.
A positive charge and an uncharged charge will attract each other. This is because the positive charge will create an electric field that will induce a separation of charges in the neutral object, causing it to become polarized and attract the positive charge.
Cönsider a negatively charged object be placed at a fixed position ,now a neutral or uncharged object is slowly introducing into the field which is produced by the electrons in negatively charged object.... And now according to the law of charges opposite charges attract each other similar thing taking place here the electrons present on the negatively charged object attracts the positive charge in neutral object by separting the charges inside the object wich is called induction as soon as the neutral object enters into the field produce by negatively charged object ...,and then it attracts...
When charges in an uncharged object are rearranged without direct contact with a charged object, it is called charging by induction. This process involves bringing a charged object close to the uncharged object, causing the charges to redistribute within the uncharged object.
Charging an object without touching it is a process called induction. This involves bringing a charged object close to the uncharged object, causing the charges to redistribute within the uncharged object. This results in the uncharged object becoming charged without direct contact.
An uncharged object can become positively charged through a process called charging by induction. This occurs when a charged object is brought close to the uncharged object, causing a redistribution of electrons. Electrons are repelled by the like charge, leaving the uncharged object with a net positive charge.
It becomes charged. (negatively)
The rearrangement of electrons on an uncharged object without direct contact with a charged object can occur through induction. This process involves bringing a charged object near the uncharged object, which causes a temporary separation of charge within the uncharged object. The closer charged object induces a redistribution of electrons within the uncharged object, resulting in one side becoming more negatively charged while the other becomes more positively charged.
In that case, the fact that the charges are rearranged - there is an electric dipole - can cause the charged object and the object with the zero net charge (but with an electric dipole) to attract one another.
A neutrally charged object can still be affected by a charged object. If a neutrally charged object is being approached by a negatively charged objects, the electrons within the neutrally charged object will migrate to the other side (as the two negative charges repel), leaving the side closes to the negative object positive. Protons do not move. From there, the protons are attracted to the electrons, therefore moving the 'uncharged' object.