Chemistry, asked by alok6166, 11 months ago

What is the law of conservation of electric charge?

Answers

Answered by rinshu19
2

Question:

What is the law of conservation of electric charge?

Answer:

According to the 'law of conversation of electric charge' states that electric charge can neither be created nor destroyed. In a closed system, the amount of charge remains the same. When something charges its charge it doesn't create change but transfer it.

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Answered by cyrusbishop
0

Answer:

Experiments and many other phenomena show that the total amount of charge in an isolated system remains constant. A charge may, however, be transferred from one part of the system to another, but the net charge will always remain the same.

It means that charge can neither be created nor be destroyed. This is the law of conservation of charge. No violation of this law has ever been observed in any natural event where there is a transfer of charge.

When a glass rod is rubbed with silk, a positive charge appears on the rod and at the same time, an equal negative charge appears on the silk. Thus, the net charge on the rod silk system is zero both before and after rubbing.

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