A charged rod either has a positive or negative charge. Since water is polar, meaning it has more electrons on one side than the other, bringing a charged rod near water will force the water molecules to rearrange so that it will be attracted to the rod. A positively charged rod would attract the oxygen side of the water molecules, while a negatively charged rod would attract the hydrogen side.
This will work for any polar molecule.
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By rubbing the silk against the glass rod, a static charge is created on both objects. By bringing the charged glass rod near the stream of tap water, the water molecules become polarized and are attracted to the charged rod, causing the stream of water to bend towards the rod. This occurs due to the attractive force between the charged rod and the polarized water molecules.
Ebonite rod becomes positively charged and the fur becomes negatively charged. Hold on electrons: Fur > Ebonite rod So, the ebonite rod loses its electrons to the fur and the fur becomes negatively charged.
Water is a polar molecule, meaning it has a positively charged side and a negatively charged side. When a charged plastic rod is brought near water, the positive or negative charges on the rod interact with the corresponding charges on the water molecules, causing the water to be attracted to the rod.
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By rubbing the silk against the glass rod, a static charge is created on both objects. By bringing the charged glass rod near the stream of tap water, the water molecules become polarized and are attracted to the charged rod, causing the stream of water to bend towards the rod. This occurs due to the attractive force between the charged rod and the polarized water molecules.
Rubbing an acetate strip with tissue paper transfers electrons, giving the strip a negative charge. When you hold the strip near running water, the positive ions in the water are attracted to the negatively charged strip, causing the water stream to bend towards the strip due to the electrostatic force between the charged objects.
Ebonite rod becomes positively charged and the fur becomes negatively charged. Hold on electrons: Fur > Ebonite rod So, the ebonite rod loses its electrons to the fur and the fur becomes negatively charged.
Water is a polar molecule, meaning it has a positively charged side and a negatively charged side. When a charged plastic rod is brought near water, the positive or negative charges on the rod interact with the corresponding charges on the water molecules, causing the water to be attracted to the rod.
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it is becuase when a glas rod charged by rubbing a cloth it aquires positive charge and when a plastic straw is charged by rubbing a cloth it aquires negative charge. Therefore a charged glass rod attracts a charged plastic rod.
because the benzz of the zeema is quite zeusy in comparison to the fluctuation of water.
A charged polythene rod will attract paper. When the rod is charged, it develops an electric field that exerts a force on the charged particles in the paper, causing the paper to be attracted to the rod.
Yes, the fur becomes negatively charged as it loses electrons to the glass rod. The glass rod becomes positively charged as it gains these electrons. The fur is negatively charged compared to the rod.
You can demonstrate static electricity by rubbing a balloon against your hair or clothing, then using the charged balloon to attract small objects like paper bits or confetti. Another way is to rub a plastic rod with a cloth and bring it close to a stream of water to see the water bend towards the rod due to static electricity.
yes, because usually metals are positively charged and positive repells positive