Rubbing fur with a material such as rubber or plastic creates a negative charge through a process called triboelectric charging. This happens when electrons are transferred from one material to the other, resulting in one material becoming positively charged and the other becoming negatively charged.
Rubbing ebonite against fur can create a static charge on the ebonite due to the transfer of electrons between the two materials. This can lead to the ebonite gaining a negative charge and the fur gaining a positive charge.
Rubbing a lucite rod with fur causes the rod to become charged by friction. Electrons are transferred from the fur to the lucite rod, giving the rod a negative charge and the fur a positive charge. This is known as triboelectric charging.
When you rub a balloon on your head, electrons are transferred from your hair to the balloon, giving the balloon a negative charge. This negative charge creates static electricity, which causes the balloon to stick to surfaces like walls or hair due to the attraction between the positive and negative charges.
put it in the water and it can be attracted to anything
it depends on the charge...if it is positive on a negative they create static if it is positive on a positive or a negative on a negative...nothingAnother view:The friction develops heat.
Rubbing ebonite against fur can create a static charge on the ebonite due to the transfer of electrons between the two materials. This can lead to the ebonite gaining a negative charge and the fur gaining a positive charge.
Rubbing a lucite rod with fur causes the rod to become charged by friction. Electrons are transferred from the fur to the lucite rod, giving the rod a negative charge and the fur a positive charge. This is known as triboelectric charging.
it depends on the charge...if it is positive on a negative they create static if it is positive on a positive or a negative on a negative...nothingAnother view:The friction develops heat.
When you rub a balloon on your head, electrons are transferred from your hair to the balloon, giving the balloon a negative charge. This negative charge creates static electricity, which causes the balloon to stick to surfaces like walls or hair due to the attraction between the positive and negative charges.
put it in the water and it can be attracted to anything
it depends on the charge...if it is positive on a negative they create static if it is positive on a positive or a negative on a negative...nothingAnother view:The friction develops heat.
To create a strong static charge, you can rub materials together to transfer electrons. Materials like wool, plastic, or fur can create static electricity when rubbed against certain surfaces like metal or glass. The friction from the rubbing causes electrons to be transferred between the materials, building up a static charge.
When you rub your head against a balloon and 1. Your hair sticks up and 2. The balloon can stick to the ceiling :)
electrons are transferred to the stick,causing it to take on a negative charge.
To create static electricity, you can rub two objects together, such as a balloon and your hair, to transfer electrons and build up a charge. This can cause the objects to attract or repel each other due to the imbalance of positive and negative charges.
The cloth will acquire a negative charge. Rubbing the plastic rod transfers electrons from the rod to the cloth, leaving the cloth with an excess of electrons, giving it a negative charge.
The hard rubber would acquire a negative charge as electrons move from the wool to the rubber. Wool has a higher tendency to lose electrons, leaving the rubber with an excess of electrons and thus a negative charge.