POSITIVE EFFECTS:- - Tourists bring money for the local people and services- - Tourist demand services so new jobs are created to supply the demand
- Tourists bring money to the economy
NEGATIVE EFFECTS:- - Noise and air pollution from aircraft- - Congestion- - The desire to make money supersedes health and safety regulations- - Diverts labour and resources away from non-tourist regions- - Litter and water pollution due to tourism pressures and infrastructure- - Poor building development - Tourist complexes do not integrate with local architecture- - Foreign owned tourist complexes mean profits go offshore.
Yes, Mass tourism is still very important. Despite what people are saying about it, and the negative effects it has on environments, it still plays a large role in the tourism industry and the local industry of the area visited. If the tourism industry is to survive, and keep local bussiness's alfloat, then we need mass tourism.
ambot
your a dog
What is the mass of a proton
The electrons that are missing have a negative effective mass. So the holes have a positive effective mass.
Technically, it's not. It's only attractive between two positive masses or two negative masses. One positive mass and one negative mass would repel each other. It's just that we've never encountered a piece of negative mass yet.
Pprotons have a positive charge neutrons have no charge and electrons have a negative charge. However the one with the smallest mass is electrons.
Mass of a body is a positive quantity. The gravitational force between two masses is always attractive. Electric charge can be positive or negative or zero.
Force is equal to mass multiplied by acceleration. Acceleration is change in velocity either positive or negative. Mass is always positive.
Negative: He consistently engaged in mass-murder and genocide. He was a horrible person.
In classical physics, mass is considered a positive quantity, as it relates to the amount of matter in an object. However, in theoretical physics, concepts like negative mass have been proposed in certain contexts, such as in hypothetical scenarios involving exotic matter or in some interpretations of general relativity. Negative mass would behave differently, potentially repelling positive mass rather than attracting it. Nonetheless, no experimental evidence currently supports the existence of negative mass.
No. There is no such thing as "negative matter." There is a such thing as anti matter, but it still has positive mass.