Physics, asked by anaskhan19523, 1 year ago

In nature, the electric charge of any system is always equal to

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
12
HEY MATE HERE IS ANSWER,,,,,
IN NATURE ELECTRICAL CHARGE IS EQUAL TO INTEGRAL AMOUNT OF LEAST AMOUNT OF CHARGE OF CHARGE .ALL CHARGES ARE QUANTINIZED WHICH IS TO SAY THAT INTEGRAL AMOUNT OF LEAST AMOUNT OF CHARGE.


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Answered by varshika1664
0

Answer:

Because of some basic properties, the electric charge of any system is by nature is always equal to integral multiple of the least amount of charge. Therefore, the correct answer would be integral multiple of the least amount of charge.

Explanation:

Electric Charge is the assets of subatomic particles that reasons it to revel in a pressure whilst located in an electric powered and magnetic field.

Electric charges are of two types: Positive and Negative, normally carried through charge carriers protons and electrons.

Examples of the sorts of charges are subatomic particles or the particles of matter:

  → Protons are positively charged.

  → Electrons are negatively charged.

  → Neutrons have 0 charge.

Electric charge is a scalar quantity. Apart from having a significance and direction, a quantity to be termed a vector ought to additionally obey the legal guidelines of vector addition, together with triangle law of vector addition and parallelogram law of vector addition; only then the quantity is stated to be a vector quantity. When two currents meet at a junction, withinside the case of an electric powered current, the ensuing current of those might be an algebraic sum and now no longer the vector sum. Therefore, an electric powered current is a scalar quantity, even though it possesses significance and direction.

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