Asked by Sarah
Gillian is investigating the distribution of charge in objects using friction. Gillian gently rubs a rubber balloon on the fur of her pet cat. When she pulls the balloon away from the cat's fur, the fur is attracted to the balloon. Which best explains why the fur becomes attracted to the balloon?
a
Rubbing the balloon along the cat transfers extra protons from the balloon to the cat.
b
Rubbing the balloon along the cat transfers extra electrons from the cat to the balloon.
c
Rubbing the balloon along the cat creates extra protons that will stick to both the balloon and cat.
d
Rubbing the balloon along the cat creates extra electrons that will stick to both the balloon and cat.
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
Answer: b
Rubbing transfers electrons from the cat's fur to the balloon, leaving the fur positively charged and the balloon negatively charged. Opposite charges attract, so the fur is attracted to the balloon.
Rubbing transfers electrons from the cat's fur to the balloon, leaving the fur positively charged and the balloon negatively charged. Opposite charges attract, so the fur is attracted to the balloon.
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