Static charge
When a balloon is rubbed on a jersey, it gains an electric charge. This charge creates an attraction between the balloon and the ceiling, which is typically neutral in charge. The balloon sticks to the ceiling because of the electrical forces holding it there.
When a balloon is rubbed on your hair, electrons are transferred from your hair to the balloon, giving the balloon a negative charge and your hair a positive charge. This results in an overall negative net charge on the balloon.
The overall electric charge of the balloon is positive due to acquiring electrons when rubbed with the cloth. The overall electric charge of the cloth is negative because it loses electrons during the rubbing process.
Pepper sticks to a balloon due to static electricity. When the balloon is rubbed against hair or clothing, it gains an electric charge. The pepper, being lightweight, is attracted to the charged balloon and sticks to it.
When a balloon carries a static electric charge, it can induce an opposite charge on the wall it approaches. These opposite charges attract each other, causing the balloon to stick to the wall due to electrostatic forces.
When a balloon is rubbed on a jersey, it gains an electric charge. This charge creates an attraction between the balloon and the ceiling, which is typically neutral in charge. The balloon sticks to the ceiling because of the electrical forces holding it there.
When a balloon is rubbed on your hair, electrons are transferred from your hair to the balloon, giving the balloon a negative charge and your hair a positive charge. This results in an overall negative net charge on the balloon.
The overall electric charge of the balloon is positive due to acquiring electrons when rubbed with the cloth. The overall electric charge of the cloth is negative because it loses electrons during the rubbing process.
Pepper sticks to a balloon due to static electricity. When the balloon is rubbed against hair or clothing, it gains an electric charge. The pepper, being lightweight, is attracted to the charged balloon and sticks to it.
When a balloon carries a static electric charge, it can induce an opposite charge on the wall it approaches. These opposite charges attract each other, causing the balloon to stick to the wall due to electrostatic forces.
When the balloon is rubbed with wool, it gains a negative charge while the tissue paper remains positively charged. Opposite charges attract, causing the tissue paper to stick to the balloon. This is due to the transfer of electrons from the wool to the balloon, creating an electric charge imbalance between the two objects.
When a balloon is rubbed with a wooden sleeve, it gains a negative charge. This happens because electrons are transferred from the atoms in the wooden sleeve to the atoms in the balloon, leaving the balloon with an excess of electrons and thus a negative charge.
When a balloon is rubbed against a material like hair, it gains static electric charge. The balloon becomes negatively charged, and the wall becomes positively charged as electrons move away. Opposite charges attract, causing the balloon to stick to the wall due to the electrostatic force between them.
The rubbed balloon becomes negatively charged from the transfer of electrons. The wooden wall becomes positively charged because it loses some electrons to the balloon. Opposite charges attract, causing the balloon to stick to the wall.
A balloon becomes negatively charged when rubbed with wool cloth. This happens because the balloon gains electrons from the wool cloth during the rubbing process, giving it a net negative charge.
When a balloon is rubbed with a wool cloth, electrons are transferred from the wool to the balloon, giving the balloon a negative charge and the wool a positive charge. This causes the balloon to become electrostatically charged and it will be attracted to positively charged objects or repelled by negatively charged objects.
There is a very big difference between the electrical charge of a balloon rubbed in a person's hair and a glass rod rubbed with silk. The charge from the balloon will just make it stick to objects. The charge from the glass rod will emit a very large electrical shock that might knock a person to the ground. This is because the glass rod is a better conductor of electricity than the balloon.