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Are there gay electrons of like charge that attract?
6 Answers
- ?Lv 48 years agoFavorite Answer
You've attracted a lot of people here to answer your question so one could say that you are quite gay.
- 8 years ago
I don't Appreciate the way the question was stated but the answer us, in a way. The attraction between sub-atomic particles is due to different charge, and in high school we are taught that electrons are negatively charged, but in reality there are also positively charged electrons, but those are a different king of electron altogether. So....... yes and no.
Source(s): http://web.ihep.su/dbserv/compas/src/anderson33/en... http://prola.aps.org/abstract/PR/v45/i11/p781_1 and eight grade science teacher. - ?Lv 78 years ago
Repulsion is implicit in the concept of particle charge. The closest cognate would be neutrons, which carry no charge but which do hang together by simple force of gravity.
Other answers referenced positrons. Positrons are the "dark matter" equivalent of electrons. They repel each other and attract electrons.
- Born YesterdayLv 78 years ago
Yes, they're called positrons.
They attract with such force that consummation results in
annihilation with a decay energy of .511mev for each of the gamma rays.
- 8 years ago
I'm pretty sure there issn't but there a lot of undiscovered things about stuff like that.