D
David Virgil Hobbs
Guest
IS THE TOTAL CHARGE OF AN ORGANISM/UNIT ALWAYS THE SUM OF THE POSITIVE
CHARGE IN THE ORGANISM/UNIT PLUS THE THE SUM OF THE NEGATIVE CHARGE IN
THE ORGANISM/UNIT?
I could probably find the exact answer to this question eventually
after doing a Google search, but I thought I might save quite alot of
time if I got lucky posting this question to newsgroups. The question
is, is the charge of a unit always the sum of the charges within the
unit? For example if there is an organism with ten molecules, 3 of
which are negatively charged and 3 of which are positively charged, is
the total charge of the organism simply 3 + -3 = 0? Is the total
charge of the organism or unit always simply the positive charge in
the organism/unit plus the negative charge in the organism/unit?
CHARGE IN THE ORGANISM/UNIT PLUS THE THE SUM OF THE NEGATIVE CHARGE IN
THE ORGANISM/UNIT?
I could probably find the exact answer to this question eventually
after doing a Google search, but I thought I might save quite alot of
time if I got lucky posting this question to newsgroups. The question
is, is the charge of a unit always the sum of the charges within the
unit? For example if there is an organism with ten molecules, 3 of
which are negatively charged and 3 of which are positively charged, is
the total charge of the organism simply 3 + -3 = 0? Is the total
charge of the organism or unit always simply the positive charge in
the organism/unit plus the negative charge in the organism/unit?