- IONS
- Particle found frequently in crosswords
- Charged particles
- They're charged
- Charged atoms
- Charged-up atoms
- They're always charged
- They're charged up
- Cyclotron particles
- They might dissociate in aqueous solutions
- Fluoride and chloride
- Saturn models
- They're not free of charge
- Atoms having electrical charges
- Electrified particles
- Solar wind particles
- Charged stuff
- Beam particles
- Charge carriers
- Air-purifier emissions
- Charged bits
- Charged items
- Some Saturns
- You'll get a charge out of them
- Electrical components
- Tiny charge carriers
- They're easy to react
- Flow through a wire
- Free radicals, e.g.
- They're often ready to bond
- Hydronium and such
- Current movers, sometimes
- Hydrochloric acid, when added to water
- They're all charged up
- Electron losers or gainers
- They may carry a charge
- You may get a charge out of them
- Atoms with a charge
- They're never free of charge
- Accelerator particles
- Cyclotron bits
- Certain Saturns
- Electrolyte particles
- Saturn sedans
- Electron losers
- Particles with a charge
- Plasma particles
- Certain plasma particles
- Na+ and Cl-
- Atoms with charges
- Nonneutral atoms
- Particles in a redox reaction
- Things with charges
- They're net positive or net negative
- They can hold a charge
- Tiny particles
- They're electrified
- Electrolysis particles
- H+ and Cl___
- 2000s GM compacts
- Charged things
- Plasma bits
- Physics particles
- + or - particles
- Electrical particles
- Electrified atoms
- They carry charges
- Lightning particles
- Electrolysis products
- Non-neutral particles
- Atomic particles that carry charges
- Free electrons
- Reaction participants
- They carry a charge
- Atom fragments
- Physicist's particles
- Cloud-chamber particles
- Accelerator products
- Plasma components
- Smoke-detector output
- Some atoms
- Atomic particles
- + or - bits
- They're charged in physics
- What cloud chambers track
- What make smoke detectors work
- They're transported by blood plasma
- Electrified bits
- Fodder for "Star Wars" cannons
- What water softeners exchange
- Chem 101 study
- Subatomic topic
- Atoms that may be radical
- They're exchanged in water softening
- Atoms with extra electrons
- They make smoke alarms work
- Output of smoke detectors
- What powers "Star Wars" cannons
- Positive ray particles
- Rocket engine discharge, perhaps
- Acid soil contents
- Ringer's solution contents
- Carbonium and hydronium, for two
- Components of some beams
- Movers in an electrolytic conductor
- Electrojet bits
- Atoms plus electrons.
- Cations or anions.
- Compounds of atoms and electrons.
- Electric particles.
- Atoms, electrically charged.
- Chemist's concern.
- Electrically charged particles.
- Parts of atoms.
- Certain atoms.
- Certain particles.
- Electrical atoms.
- Particles in nuclear experiments.
- Electrically charged atoms.
- Energized particles.
- Atoms.
- Charged molecules.
- Particles.
- Noun-forming suffixes.
- Relatives of protons.
- Noun endings.
- Physicist's concern.
- Chemical particles.
- Gas particles
- Cations
- Electrons
- Physicists' concerns
- Atomic units
- Cyclotron items
- Molecule clusters
- Subatomic particles
- Items studied by R. A. Millikan
- Molecule parts
- Particles in cyclotrons
- Minute particles
- Products of gamma rays
- They may be exchanged in chambers
- They move in a charged atmosphere
- Exchanged items, maybe
- Exploratorium subject
- Na+ and Ca++, e.g.
- Radiation products
- Bonding candidates
- Ca++ and Cl-
- Particles in particle accelerators
- Atoms that have gained or lost electrons
- Exchanged items
- Salt constituents
- Molecular bits
- They can be indicated by a + or –
- Charge holders
- Ones with charges
- Ammonium particles, e.g.
- Atoms with + or - symbols
- Carbonium and others
- Plus and minus items
- Table salt is composed of them
- Table salt is made of them
- Discoveries of Michael Faraday
- Makeup of some beams
- Particle accelerator particles
- Plasma constituents
- They have pluses and minuses
- Ammonium and others
- + and - particles
- Makeup of some sci-fi beams
- Parts of some bonds
- Cannon ammo in sci-fi
- Sci-fi beam makeup
- Things charged at science labs?
- Particles proposed by Michael Faraday in the 1830s
- What electrolytes contain
- Electrojet particles
- They have charges
- Particles with charges
- Electrolysis atoms
- Bits of physics
- Particles in a particle accelerator
- They're + or -
- Chloride and fluoride, for two
- Phosphate and sulfate, for two
- Their exchange is used in water softening
- They're charged and can be exchanged
- Electrified elements
- They're charged and exchanged
- Positively charged particles
- Charged atomic particles
- Particle beam particles
- Some atomic particles
- Particles generated by some hair dryers
- Particles such as F-
- Atoms that have lost electrons, for instance
- Positive particles, perhaps
- Na+ and Cl-, for two
- Particles such as H and I-
- Positive or negative particles
- Particles in electrolytes
- Particles such as Na+ and Cl-
- Sports drink particles
- They must be charged
- Charge particles
- Atomic group
- Salt crystal parts
- They're quite attractive
- They are not free of charge
- Atomic bits
- They're from Saturn
- Little items with charges
- Some old Saturns
- Atom bits
- Accelerator bits
- Particles in accelerators
- Particles in rechargeable batteries
- Particles with + or - symbols
- Particles in particle beams
- Particles in solar wind
- Some are positively charged
- Faraday named them
- Mass spectrum particles
- They're exchanged in water softeners
- Battery bits
- Electrolyte components
- Dissociation products
- Particles with pluses or minuses
- Particles with charge
- Bearers of charges