Static electricity is made up of electrons and protons that are not moving.
Static electricity is the imbalance of positive and negative charges on the surface of an object. Atoms are made up of positively charged protons, neutrally charged neutrons, and negatively charged electrons. When atoms gain or lose electrons, they become charged and can create static electricity through the attraction and repulsion of charged particles.
Static cling comes from the build-up of static electricity. Any solid material is made up of atoms, which are made out of electrons. For an atom to be stable it must have a certain number of positive and negative electrons. If there are any that are missing then the atom will try and take electrons from something else, which causes the clinging.
Static electricity is a form of electricity that does not flow: it is electricity at rest. Objects carry positive electric charges when some of their atoms have fewer electrons than they should, and they carry negative electric charges when some of the atoms have more electrons than they should. An easy way to produce static electricity is to rub two objects (made of certain materials) together: this transfers electrons from one item to another, giving each a positive or negative charge. Positively and negatively charged objects are attracted to each other like magnets-because each wants to shed or acquire electrons. When static electricity becomes powerful enough, so many electrons jump from one thing to another that they cause a visible electric spark, which you will feel as a little "shock" if one of the things the electrons jump to you! (Loose electrons can attach to atoms in the surface of your skin.) Lightning, in fact, is really just a giant spark that results when static electricity builds up in a cloud during a thunderstorm.
Static electricity is a form of electricity that does not flow: it is electricity at rest. Objects carry positive electric charges when some of their atoms have fewer electrons than they should, and they carry negative electric charges when some of the atoms have more electrons than they should. An easy way to produce static electricity is to rub two objects (made of certain materials) together: this transfers electrons from one item to another, giving each a positive or negative charge. Positively and negatively charged objects are attracted to each other like magnets-because each wants to shed or acquire electrons. When static electricity becomes powerful enough, so many electrons jump from one thing to another that they cause a visible electric spark, which you will feel as a little "shock" if one of the things the electrons jump to you! (Loose electrons can attach to atoms in the surface of your skin.) Lightning, in fact, is really just a giant spark that results when static electricity builds up in a cloud during a thunderstorm.
=Usually, atoms have the same number of electrons and protons. Then the atom has no charge, it is "neutral." But if you rub things together, electrons can move from one atom to another. Some atoms get extra electrons. They have a negative charge. Other atoms lose electrons. They have a positive charge. When charges are separated like this, it is called static electricity.=
Static Electricity
Static electricity translates into electrons not in motion. Typically, you rub rubber on fur to get static electricity. I get static electricity from petting my cat (I am a rubber of my cat, but I am not made of rubber.)
Everything is made up of atoms and they hold electrons, protons and neutrons. Electrons can move. Static electricity is the presence of either too many electrons (negative charge) or too few electrons (positive charge). The movement of static electricity ... normally called an "electric current" ... is the flow of electrons from one place to another.
Static means it doesn't move. This is essentially what static electricity is, a charge tht has no current. It is made by the transfer of electrons, as a pose to a cell or battery.
Static electricity causes electrons to move from one material to the other. In an insulator, these electrons can't flow back to equalise the charges, whereas in a conductor they can; so whilst they could conceivably generate static electricity, it would be lost as quickly as it was made.
Static electricity is caused by the imbalance of positive and negative charges on the surface of an object. Atoms are made up of protons, neutrons, and electrons. When two objects rub against each other, electrons can be transferred between them, leading to an excess or deficit of electrons on the surface of the objects, creating static electricity.
Electricity.
electricity, electrical energy
a simple explanation is that static electricity is just electricity that is stored in a non-chemical way, similar to that of a capacitor. the electrons that make the charge are at a higher concentration to normal and when a contact is made (like if you touch your television screen) the electrons move (and thus stop being static) to a place where there is a lower concentration of electrons/electric charge.
Static electricity is the imbalance of positive and negative charges on the surface of an object. Atoms are made up of positively charged protons, neutrally charged neutrons, and negatively charged electrons. When atoms gain or lose electrons, they become charged and can create static electricity through the attraction and repulsion of charged particles.
Substances as we know them are not made up entirely of electrons. Electricity is composed of moving electrons, but it is not exactly a substance.
Static cling comes from the build-up of static electricity. Any solid material is made up of atoms, which are made out of electrons. For an atom to be stable it must have a certain number of positive and negative electrons. If there are any that are missing then the atom will try and take electrons from something else, which causes the clinging.