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Charged

Charged is a term used in several domains. In physics, it describes objects that carry electric charge; in law, it denotes formal accusations against a person; in everyday usage, it can refer to emotional intensity or to energy stored in devices.

Electric charge is a property of matter arising from subatomic particles. Electrons carry negative charge; protons

In legal contexts, a charge is a formal accusation that a person committed a crime or offense.

In other uses, “charged” describes situations with strong emotional or rhetorical intensity, such as a charged

carry
positive.
The
basic
unit
of
charge
is
the
coulomb,
with
the
elementary
charge
about
1.602
×
10^-19
coulombs.
Like
charges
repel
and
opposite
charges
attract,
governed
by
Coulomb’s
law
and
the
surrounding
electric
field.
An
object
is
charged
if
it
has
a
net
excess
of
protons
or
electrons.
Charging
can
occur
by
conduction
(contact
with
a
charged
body),
induction
(rearrangement
of
charges
in
a
neutral
body
due
to
a
nearby
charge),
or
friction
(triboelectric
effect).
The
total
charge
in
an
isolated
system
is
conserved.
Charges
are
brought
by
prosecutors
or
grand
juries
and
can
lead
to
an
arraignment
or
indictment.
A
charge
is
not
a
conviction;
a
defendant
may
plead,
be
found
not
guilty,
or
have
charges
dismissed
or
reduced
as
cases
proceed.
The
charging
decision
guides
subsequent
proceedings
and
the
burden
of
proof.
atmosphere.
In
electronics,
a
device
is
described
as
charged
when
it
stores
electrical
energy,
as
in
a
charged
battery
or
capacitor.