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  2. Static electricity | Causes, Examples, Facts, & Description -...

    www.britannica.com/science/static-electricity

    static electricity, form of electricity resulting from the imbalance between positive and negative charges within a material that occurs when electrons (the negatively charged particles in an atom) move from one material to another.

  3. What is static electricity and what causes it? - Explain that...

    www.explainthatstuff.com/how-static-electricity-works.html

    An easy-to-understand explanation of why static electricity is caused by repeated contact between different materials.

  4. We Finally Know What Creates Static Electricity, After Thousands...

    www.sciencealert.com/we-finally-know-what-creates-static-electricity-after...

    In 600 BCE, Greek philosopher Thales of Miletus noticed that when he rubbed fur on amber, the fur attracted dust. That tiny charge generated came to be known as static electricity.

  5. Static Electricity: Definition, How It Works, Facts (w/ Examples)

    sciencing.com/static-electricity-definition-how-it-works-facts-w-examples...

    Static electricity is a build up of charge that occurs after two objects have been in contact, where one picks up extra electrons, and the other develops an electron deficit. This gives each object a net charge, and this can lead to a static discharge, from a soft zap to a lightning bolt.

  6. What Is Static Electricity? - Live Science

    www.livescience.com/51656-static-electricity.html

    Static electricity results from an imbalance between negative and positive charges in objects.

  7. What Causes Static Electricity? - Live Science

    www.livescience.com/what-causes-static-electricity.html

    Mizzi and his colleagues discovered that static electricity is produced when the asperities in insulators rub against each other and interfere with the electron clouds....

  8. Where Static Electricity Comes From and How It Works

    www.discovermagazine.com/the-sciences/where-static-electricity-comes-from-and...

    Static electricity comes down to the interactive force between electrical charges. At the atomic scale, negative charges are carried by tiny elementary particles called electrons. Most electrons are neatly packed inside the bulk of matter, whether it be a hard and lifeless stone or the soft, living tissue of your body.

  9. Static electricity - BBC Bitesize

    www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/articles/zshqqfr

    Static electricity is a build-up of electrical charge on an object. Some of the electrons are transferred across. This leaves an excess of negative charge on one of the objects,...

  10. Introduction to Static Electricity - Let's Talk Science

    letstalkscience.ca/.../backgrounders/introduction-static-electricity

    Static electricity, better known as lightning, during a thunderstorm (Source: Keli Black via Pixabay). During a storm, clouds pass by each other. Electrons can jump from one cloud to another. Because of this, some of the clouds can develop large positive or negative electrical charges.

  11. Static electricity - Science Teaching

    science-teaching.org/science/articles/static-electricity

    Static electricity is the imbalance of positive and negative charges. If two things have opposite charges, they attract each other; if they have like charges, they repel each other. This explains why your hair stands on end when you take off a sweater or a wool hat.