Physics, asked by devanshumandrai19, 5 months ago

Explain the law of convertion of charge with an example. No lame answers​

Answers

Answered by ashupm
0

Answer:

Law of conservation of charge says that the net charge of an isolated system will always remain constant.[1] This means that any system that is not exchanging mass or energy with its surroundings will never have a different total charge at any two times. For example, if two objects in an isolated system have a net charge of zero, and one object exchanges one million electrons to the other, the object with the excess electrons will be negatively charged and the object with the reduced number of electrons will have a positive charge of the same magnitude. The total charge of the system has not and will never change.[1]

This concept is important for all nuclear reactions—alpha decay, beta decay, gamma decay, etc.— because it allows scientists to predict the composition of the final product in the reaction, shown in Figure 1.[2]

Charged particles are allowed to be created or destroyed, as long as the net charge before and after the creation/destruction stays the same. Therefore this must happen with oppositely charged pairs of matter and anti-matter.[1]

The law of conservation of charge states that the electric charge can neither be created nor destroyed. In a closed system, the amount of charge remains the same. When something changes its charge, it does not create charge but transfers it.

For example,

1) Due to friction opposite charges appear on two bodies that are rubbing against each other bu the net charge is still zero.

2) During radioactive decay, a proton decays into a positron and a neutron, again no net charge production.

Answered by mansi860
0

Answer:

Law of conversation of charge -

Charge can neither be created nor be destroyed it can only be converted from one form to another.

Explanation:

Hope it helps u ☺️

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