There are positive and negative charges.
Electric charge is a fundamental conserved property of some subatomic particles, which determines their electromagnetic interaction. Electrically charged matter is influenced by, and produces, electromagnetic fields. The interaction between a moving charge and an electromagnetic field is the source of the electromagnetic force, which is one of the four fundamental forces.
The electric charge on a body may be positive or negative. Two positively charged bodies experience a mutual repulsive force, as do two negatively charged bodies. A positively charged body and a negatively charged body experience an attractive force. The study of how charged bodies interact is classical electrodynamics, which is accurate insofar as quantum effects can be ignored.
Twentieth-century experiments demonstrated that electric charge is quantized: the charge of any system, body, or particle (except quarks) is an integer multiple of the elementary charge, e, approximately equal to 1.602×10−19 coulombs. The proton has a charge of e, and the electron has a charge of −e. The study of charged particles, and how their interactions are mediated by photons, is quantum electrodynamics.
Electric charges that are different attract each other. This is based on the principle that opposite charges attract. When different charges are brought close together, they will tend to move towards each other.
True. Electric charges that are different (positive and negative charges) attract each other, following the principle of opposites attract. This attraction is governed by Coulomb's law, which describes the force between two charges.
Positive charges attract negative charges and repel other positive charges. Negative charges do the opposite, attracting positive charges and repelling other negative charges. Like charges repel and opposite charges attract.
True. Electric charges that are different, such as positive and negative charges, attract each other. This is known as the principle of electrostatic attraction.
I can't be sure of exactly what you mean when you say "different". -- The two objects attract each other if their charges have opposite signs. -- They repel each other if their charges both have the same sign. These statements are both true whether or not the charges on the two objects have the same or different magnitudes.
the different types of charges are positive and negative charges
the different types of charges are positive and negative charges
Electric charges that are different attract each other. This is based on the principle that opposite charges attract. When different charges are brought close together, they will tend to move towards each other.
different poles have different charges, and different charges are attracted to each other
My answer is bees, i think
it depends on what you use them for and if they`re universal charges.
proton +1neutron 0electron -1
indirect exp
True. Electric charges that are different (positive and negative charges) attract each other, following the principle of opposites attract. This attraction is governed by Coulomb's law, which describes the force between two charges.
Attract
Positive charges attract negative charges and repel other positive charges. Negative charges do the opposite, attracting positive charges and repelling other negative charges. Like charges repel and opposite charges attract.
True. Electric charges that are different, such as positive and negative charges, attract each other. This is known as the principle of electrostatic attraction.