It doesn't really "become" charged. An electron is always charged, and it can only have a charge of -e where value of elementary charge e is 1.602 * 10-19 C as found first by Millikan with his famous oil drop experiment
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An electron is inherently negatively charged due to its property called charge. It carries a negative elementary charge which is a fundamental property of certain subatomic particles.
When you lose an electron, you become positively charged because you have more protons than electrons. When you gain an electron, you become negatively charged because you have more electrons than protons. This process is known as ionization.
An electron is negatively charged.
No, an electron has a negative charge.
Gas particles become electrically charged when they gain or lose electrons due to interactions with other charged particles or electromagnetic fields. This process is known as ionization and can occur in environments such as plasmas, lightning strikes, or particle accelerators.
A negatively charged particle is an electron, which is a fundamental subatomic particle that orbits the nucleus of an atom. Electrons carry a negative charge equal in magnitude to the positive charge of a proton, and they play a crucial role in chemical bonding and electrical conductivity.