No, electricity does not have mass. It is a form of energy that flows through conductors like wires.
No.It does not occupy space and has no mass.
No, electricity does not have weight because it is a form of energy, not a physical object with mass.
Electricity is typically treated as a mass noun, as it refers to a general concept or form of energy rather than individual, countable units. You can say "There is a lot of electricity in the air," but not "I have three electricities."
Yes, I do think that mass affect static electricity because the bigger the object the more static electricity is needed to support the object against the surface. It also depends on how heavy the object is, heavy or light.
Examples of mass nouns that can be measured in watts include power, electricity, energy, and heat.
Because it does not have mass.
No.It does not occupy space and has no mass.
No, electricity does not have weight because it is a form of energy, not a physical object with mass.
Electricity is typically treated as a mass noun, as it refers to a general concept or form of energy rather than individual, countable units. You can say "There is a lot of electricity in the air," but not "I have three electricities."
Weight is the pull of gravity on mass. Of itself weight can not produce electricity.
Electricity its self has no mass. It is the movement of electrons which create electricity and only these electrons have mass. It is like asking if the wind has a mass. If a tidal wave crashes into your boat, it won't do any damage, tidal waves have no mass. A tidal wave itself has no mass, water has mass, a tidal wave is just the movement of water. Stick your finger in an electrical socket and tell me it doesn't have any mass. Of course electricity has mass, of course water has mass. An electron has the mass of 9.10956 x 10 -31 kg. You would have to multiply that by the amount of electricity you have, and it can be stored (battery, capacitor). A fully charged battery weighs more than an empty (dead) battery. Electricity is a force and the equation of force (F), F=m(mass)xa(acceleration), therefore electricity has mass.
because electricity has no mass and therefore no weight. electricity is not a physical object
Yes, I do think that mass affect static electricity because the bigger the object the more static electricity is needed to support the object against the surface. It also depends on how heavy the object is, heavy or light.
Thomas Alva Edison
electricity and mass
Electrons carry electricity within an atom.
Examples of mass nouns that can be measured in watts include power, electricity, energy, and heat.