Asked by xochitl

Why is glass a good insulator?(1 point)
Responses

The atoms in glass do not hold on tightly to their negatively charged particles.
The atoms in glass do not hold on tightly to their negatively charged particles.

The atoms in glass do not hold on tightly to their positively charged particles.
The atoms in glass do not hold on tightly to their positively charged particles.

The atoms in glass hold on tightly to their positively charged particles.
The atoms in glass hold on tightly to their positively charged particles.

The atoms in glass hold on tightly to their negatively charged particles.

All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
The atoms in glass hold on tightly to their negatively charged particles.

Explanation: Electrons (negatively charged) are not free to move through glass, so electric charge and heat do not flow easily — making glass a good insulator.