Adding an oppositely charged atom/molecule which usually creates an ionic bond, though in certain cases it can form a covalent bond. Or you can oxidize or reduce the species through chemical reactions or physical bombardment with electrons or protons.
An object without a charge is called electrically neutral.
After grounding an object, it will always have a neutral charge. Grounding allows excess charge to flow into the Earth, leaving the object with an overall neutral charge.
If an object has both positive and negative charges in different regions, it can still have an overall neutral charge if the total amount of positive charge is equal to the total amount of negative charge. This results in a cancellation of the charges, making the object neutral overall.
induction
No, a neutral object does not contain any net charge. This means that the positive and negative charges within the object balance each other out, resulting in a net neutral charge.
The object without charge is called Neutral object.
An object without a charge is called electrically neutral.
After grounding an object, it will always have a neutral charge. Grounding allows excess charge to flow into the Earth, leaving the object with an overall neutral charge.
If an object has both positive and negative charges in different regions, it can still have an overall neutral charge if the total amount of positive charge is equal to the total amount of negative charge. This results in a cancellation of the charges, making the object neutral overall.
induction
No, a neutral object does not contain any net charge. This means that the positive and negative charges within the object balance each other out, resulting in a net neutral charge.
the object will have neutral charge
The object with zero charge is electrically neutral.
Inducing a charge by bringing a neutral object close to a charged object is called electrostatic induction. This process causes the redistribution of charges within the neutral object, resulting in the neutral object acquiring a charge.
Electrons move onto the object, giving it a static charge. Apex ;)
The definition of neutral means the object has no charge.
A neutral pith ball is still "charged", it just doesn't display excessively charged behavior. Since it is neutral, having nearly equal positive and negative charge, the proximity of the positively charged pith ball still attracts the negative charge present in the ball, inducing polarization moving the ball closer to the positively charged one. Once they make contact, the conductibility of the pith ball quickly accepts excess charge from the other, creating a like charge repulsion.