When polythene is rubbed with a cloth, electrons are transferred from the cloth to the polythene, causing the polythene to become negatively charged. This transfer of electrons creates an imbalance of charges between the two materials, resulting in the polythene having a negative charge.
A polythene rod acquires a negative charge when rubbed with a duster. This is because electrons are transferred from the duster to the polythene rod, leaving the rod with an excess of electrons and a negative charge.
A polythene rod can acquire a negative charge when it gains extra electrons through friction with another material.
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.
Rubbing a polythene rod with a duster can transfer electrons and create a charge imbalance (like triboelectric charging). If the polythene rod gains electrons during rubbing, it will become negatively charged, meaning the duster could potentially lose positive charge, but the overall charge conservation principle still applies.
Rubbing a polythene rod with a cloth will not make it magnetic. This process of rubbing generates static electricity, not magnetism. Magnetism is a property of certain materials, such as iron and cobalt, that have aligned magnetic domains, which is different from the electrostatic charge generated by rubbing polythene.
A polythene rod acquires a negative charge when rubbed with a duster. This is because electrons are transferred from the duster to the polythene rod, leaving the rod with an excess of electrons and a negative charge.
A polythene rod can acquire a negative charge when it gains extra electrons through friction with another material.
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.
Yes, when polythene is rubbed against a steel spoon, the two materials become charged due to the transfer of electrons between them. The polythene gains a negative charge, while the steel spoon gains a positive charge.
When you rub a plastic straw with polythene, the plastic straw becomes negatively charged due to the transfer of electrons between the materials. Electrons are transferred from the polythene to the plastic straw, leaving the straw with a negative charge.
Rubbing a polythene rod with a duster can transfer electrons and create a charge imbalance (like triboelectric charging). If the polythene rod gains electrons during rubbing, it will become negatively charged, meaning the duster could potentially lose positive charge, but the overall charge conservation principle still applies.
Rubbing a polythene rod with a cloth will not make it magnetic. This process of rubbing generates static electricity, not magnetism. Magnetism is a property of certain materials, such as iron and cobalt, that have aligned magnetic domains, which is different from the electrostatic charge generated by rubbing polythene.
The cloth is left with a negative charge when rubbed against perspex due to transfer of electrons from the perspex to the cloth.
When a polythene rod is rubbed with a cloth, electrons are transferred between the two materials, causing the polythene rod to become negatively charged and the cloth to become positively charged. This results in the attraction between the two materials due to opposite charges.
An object can be charged by friction when rubbed against another surface such asa) polythene rod rubbed against a woollen cloth.This occurred because the woollen cloth lost some of it negative charges when it was rubbed, the negative charges was then transferred to the polythene rod. Now the polythene rod has been charge by friction.For proof... after it has been charged,place the polythene rod next to some *very small bits of paper and see what happens.
Rubbing a piece of cloth with a polythene rod transfers electrons from one material to the other due to friction. This causes the cloth to become negatively charged and the polythene rod to become positively charged, leading to the attraction between them due to opposite charges.
The ebonite rod acquires a negative charge when rubbed with woolen cloth because electrons are transferred from the woolen cloth to the ebonite rod.