Static Electricity.

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Static electricity is a common phenomenon to experience, particularly in winter.  You walk across a carpeted rug, then touch a door handle and…zap! A little spark stings you as it arcs between your

fingers and the metal doorknob. 

Or you brush your hair, and find that it starts sticking straight up following the brush as it approaches your head.  This paper addresses the issue of static electricity,

Because matter is made up of atoms, and atoms have a positively charged nucleus orbited by negatively charged electrons, all of matter has electrical charge associated with it.

 Normally,  positive charge of the nucleus exactly equals the negative charge of the electrons so the atom  is electrically neutral.  If an atom loses an electron for some reason, the atom becomes positively charged because the nuclear positive charge is larger than the negative charge of the remaining electrons. 

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 If the atom collects an extra electron for some reason, the opposite is true and the negatively charged electrons outnumber the positive charge in the nucleus, resulting in an overall negative charge for the atom (Library of Congress, 2011).

Static electricity happens when electrically charged atoms (either positively or negatively charged) collect on the surface of an object.  That makes the surface slightly positively or negatively charged.  Because those charges simply sit on the surface, and are not part of an electrical current, this is called “static” (i.e., not moving) electricity (Kurtus, 23 January 2009).

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