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Charged particle
Charged particle
from Wikipedia

In physics, a charged particle is a particle with an electric charge. For example, some elementary particles, like the electron or quarks are charged.[1] Some composite particles like protons are charged particles. An ion, such as a molecule or atom with a surplus or deficit of electrons relative to protons are also charged particles.

A plasma is a collection of charged particles, atomic nuclei and separated electrons, but can also be a gas containing a significant proportion of charged particles.

Charged particles are labeled as either positive (+) or negative (-). The designations are arbitrary. Nothing is inherent to a positively charged particle that makes it "positive", and the same goes for negatively charged particles.

Examples

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Positively charged particles

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Negatively charged particles

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Particles with zero charge

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See also

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References

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from Grokipedia
A charged particle is a fundamental or composite particle that possesses a nonzero , such as an like the (with charge -e) or proton (with charge +e), or a composite particle like an (with charge +2e). These particles are ubiquitous in nature and form the basis of electromagnetic interactions, mediating the electromagnetic force—one of the four fundamental forces—through the exchange of photons. The of any particle is quantized in integer multiples of the e ≈ 1.602 × 10^{-19} coulombs, ensuring no carries a fractional charge relative to this unit. Charged particles interact continuously with electric and magnetic fields via the Lorentz force, resulting in curved trajectories, acceleration, and the generation of electromagnetic radiation when accelerated, as described by classical electrodynamics. In electric fields, they experience a force proportional to the field strength and their charge, accelerating oppositely for positive and negative charges. In magnetic fields, moving charged particles follow helical paths without change in kinetic energy, a principle exploited in devices like cyclotrons and mass spectrometers. These interactions underpin phenomena ranging from atomic orbital motion to the behavior of plasmas in stars and fusion reactors. In and applications, charged particles include leptons (e.g., electrons, muons) and charged hadrons (e.g., protons, pions), which are accelerated to high energies in colliders to probe fundamental symmetries and forces. They also play vital roles in , where beams of protons or heavy ions deposit energy precisely via the , minimizing damage to surrounding tissue. Beyond technology, charged particles drive cosmic processes, such as and galactic dynamics, influencing and astrophysical observations.

Fundamentals

Definition

A is any or larger entity that carries a net , either positive or negative, arising from an imbalance of protons and electrons in composite structures or from intrinsic properties in fundamental constituents. The concept of charged particles emerged in the late , with J.J. Thomson's discovery of the in 1897 marking the identification of the first subatomic charged particle through experiments with . Unlike neutral particles, which have no net charge and do not directly interact via the electromagnetic force, charged particles experience attraction or repulsion with other charged entities based on the signs of their charges. Charged particles span a wide range of scales, from fundamental ones like quarks—which carry fractional electric charges of +2/3 or -1/3—and , to composite examples such as ions in plasmas, where atoms or molecules have gained or lost electrons to become positively or negatively charged.

Quantization of Charge

The quantization of electric charge refers to the observation that electric charge is not continuous but occurs in discrete, indivisible units. This fundamental property was first suggested by Michael Faraday's laws of electrolysis in the 1830s, which demonstrated that the mass of substances deposited or liberated during is proportional to the quantity of passed and that equal quantities of produce equivalent amounts of different substances, implying the existence of discrete "atoms" of charge./Electrochemistry/Faradays_Law) The discrete nature of charge was experimentally confirmed by Robert Millikan's oil-drop experiment in 1909, which measured the charges on tiny droplets and showed that they were always integer multiples of a fundamental unit, the ee. In this experiment, charged droplets were suspended between parallel plates in an , allowing Millikan to balance gravitational and electric forces while accounting for viscous drag, revealing that the charge on each droplet was q=neq = ne, where nn is an . The value of the is e=1.602176634×1019e = 1.602176634 \times 10^{-19} C, as precisely determined through modern measurements. In the framework of the of , all observed free particles carry electric charges that are integer multiples of ee, such as ±e\pm e for electrons and protons or ±2e\pm 2e for some ions. However, quarks, the fundamental constituents of protons and neutrons, possess fractional charges of ±13e\pm \frac{1}{3}e or ±23e\pm \frac{2}{3}e, yet these are never observed in isolation due to in , where quarks are perpetually bound within hadrons, resulting in composite particles with integer charges. This confinement ensures that no free fractional charges exist, maintaining the quantization observed in experiments. The implications of charge quantization are profound for particle , as it underpins the structure of matter in , where is treated as a conserved quantized in units of ee, facilitating the description of electromagnetic interactions without free fractional charges. This principle, evolving from Faraday's empirical insights through Millikan's precise measurements to the theoretical consistency of modern , confirms that all detectable charged particles exhibit integer multiples of the .

Properties

Electric Charge

Electric charge is a fundamental intrinsic property of certain subatomic particles that governs their interactions via electromagnetic forces, resulting in attraction between particles of opposite charge and repulsion between those of the same charge. This property is conserved in all known physical processes, meaning the total in an remains constant regardless of interactions or transformations. The sign of electric charge follows a conventional assignment: protons carry a positive charge denoted as +e, where e is the , while electrons carry an equal-magnitude but negative charge of -e. Composite particles, such as , can exhibit net charges that are integer multiples of e; for example, a sodium ion (Na⁺) has a net charge of +e due to the loss of one . Electric charge is quantified in the SI unit of the coulomb (C), defined as the amount of charge transported by a current of one ampere in one second. The magnitude of electrostatic forces between charged particles is characterized by Coulomb's constant, k=8.99×109Nm2/C2k = 8.99 \times 10^9 \, \mathrm{N \cdot m^2 / C^2}, which relates the force FF to the product of charges q1q2q_1 q_2 and the inverse square of their separation rr via F=kq1q2r2F = k \frac{|q_1 q_2|}{r^2}. In the framework of , electric charge is a , remaining invariant under Lorentz transformations between inertial reference frames. Charge values observed in nature are quantized, appearing in discrete multiples of the e ≈ 1.602 × 10^{-19} C.

Electromagnetic Interactions

Charged particles interact electromagnetically through the exchange of virtual photons, manifesting as electric and magnetic forces that govern their behavior in fields. The fundamental interaction between two stationary point charges q1q_1 and q2q_2 separated by a rr is described by , which states that the magnitude of the force is F=keq1q2r2F = k_e \frac{|q_1 q_2|}{r^2}, where ke=14πϵ08.99×109Nm2/C2k_e = \frac{1}{4\pi\epsilon_0} \approx 8.99 \times 10^9 \, \mathrm{N \cdot m^2 / C^2} is the constant and ϵ0\epsilon_0 is the . The force is repulsive for like charges and attractive for opposite charges, directed along the line joining the particles. For moving charges, the interaction extends beyond pure electrostatics due to relativistic effects, where the electric field is modified and a magnetic field is generated. A charge in motion with velocity v\mathbf{v} produces a magnetic field B\mathbf{B} that circles around the direction of motion, following the Biot-Savart law in the non-relativistic limit, but fully accounted for in special relativity through the Liénard-Wiechert potentials. The total force on a charged particle with charge qq in combined electric E\mathbf{E} and magnetic B\mathbf{B} fields is given by the Lorentz force law: F=q(E+v×B)\mathbf{F} = q(\mathbf{E} + \mathbf{v} \times \mathbf{B}). This magnetic component Fm=qv×B\mathbf{F}_m = q \mathbf{v} \times \mathbf{B} is always perpendicular to both v\mathbf{v} and B\mathbf{B}, doing no work on the particle but altering its direction. Relativistic corrections to the Coulomb force arise from these field transformations, ensuring consistency across inertial frames, as the pure 1/r21/r^2 electrostatic form applies only in the rest frame of the charges. When charged particles accelerate, they emit , a process central to phenomena like in circular accelerators. For non-relativistic accelerations, the total power radiated by a point charge qq with acceleration a\mathbf{a} is given by the : P=μ0q2a26πc,P = \frac{\mu_0 q^2 a^2}{6 \pi c}, where μ0\mu_0 is the vacuum permeability and cc is the speed of light. This radiation is dipole in nature, with intensity peaking perpendicular to the acceleration direction and zero along it, carrying away energy and leading to phenomena such as orbital decay in atomic systems. In relativistic regimes, the formula generalizes to include a γ6\gamma^6 factor, where γ=1/1v2/c2\gamma = 1/\sqrt{1 - v^2/c^2}
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