A neutral object has an equal number of positive and negative charges, so the overall charge is zero. However, individual atoms within the object may have a net charge due to electron transfer or imbalance.
As equal amount of positive and negative charges are there then the net charge on the object is the algebraical sum of them and hence it becomes zero. So chargeless.
No, not all objects have charge. Objects are made up of atoms, which consist of positively charged protons, negatively charged electrons, and neutral neutrons. The overall charge of an object depends on the balance of these particles.
Charge is a property of subatomic particles like protons and electrons, which are present in all atoms. All atoms contain some combination of positively charged protons in the nucleus and negatively charged electrons orbiting the nucleus. This gives atoms an overall neutral charge, but they do have individual charges on their component particles.
I'm really not sure, however I know that when charging by induction, the electrons repel during induction, due to grounding an object. The charge that an object has when it is charged by induction varies depending on the amount of electrons taken away. When an object is charged by induction, the object has the opposite charge of the object inducing the charge.
Neutrons do not have any electric charge at all but are neutral - hence the name. Even the neutron's antimatter menifestation, the antineutron, is neutral.
No, neutral and no charge do not mean the same thing. Neutral refers to an object having an equal number of positive and negative charges, resulting in a net charge of zero. No charge simply means there are no charges present at all.
As equal amount of positive and negative charges are there then the net charge on the object is the algebraical sum of them and hence it becomes zero. So chargeless.
If a neutral object loses negative charge, then all we can say is that the objectwill be positively charged. We don't know anything about force until we knowhow much net positive charge it has, what othercharged object is in theneighborhood, what the size and sign of thatone's charge is, and the distancebetween the two objects.
An object is neutral when it is not positively or negatively charged. All atomsare neutral. This is because all atoms have equal numbers of positively charged protons and negatively charged electrons, leading to overall neutral charge.
Some neutral objects have a weak dipole force where electron distribution is random across the whole object, and at any one given time, one side may be slightly more positive than the other. This attraction is very weak but it happens frequently especially in solutions.
Ovreall charge is neutral or no charge
A particle with no charge at all is considered neutral. This means it has an equal number of positive and negative charges, resulting in a net charge of zero. Examples of neutral particles include neutrons and neutral atoms.
No, not all objects have charge. Objects are made up of atoms, which consist of positively charged protons, negatively charged electrons, and neutral neutrons. The overall charge of an object depends on the balance of these particles.
Charge is a property of subatomic particles like protons and electrons, which are present in all atoms. All atoms contain some combination of positively charged protons in the nucleus and negatively charged electrons orbiting the nucleus. This gives atoms an overall neutral charge, but they do have individual charges on their component particles.
I'm really not sure, however I know that when charging by induction, the electrons repel during induction, due to grounding an object. The charge that an object has when it is charged by induction varies depending on the amount of electrons taken away. When an object is charged by induction, the object has the opposite charge of the object inducing the charge.
ALL atoms whatsoever DO NOT have a charge!! They're neutral.
Neutrons do not have any electric charge at all but are neutral - hence the name. Even the neutron's antimatter menifestation, the antineutron, is neutral.