Yes air resistance does resist motion of an object. If the object is very small or moving only slowly air resistance will be low. But the faster the object travels the greater will be the resistance. In fact, the reason a car doesn't go faster than it does is due to the air resistance, which will require more power to overcome than the engine can deliver.
Yes, a sort of because friction and air resistance both lie in resistance.
If you throw any object that is streamlined, as it gets less air resistance, it would be like you are rolling a ball on a smooth surface. The theme of the both object is that they receive less resistance.
Yes, because air can oppose motion. If you're trying to jog, and then the wind starts blowing at your body, you can't run as fast as you were, can you?
Yes. It falls under the category of drag force. Drag force is the force that resists the motion of a body.
no it is entirely caused by the air hitting a surface obviously the bigger the surface area the more air resistance
Yes.
Yes
yes
two forces that can stop the forward motion are, air resistance and friction.
Resistant forces. They resist against the motion of an object, like kinetic friction.
You don't "resist" it but you "reduce" it. For example, many vehicles and projectiles are made in a streamline design to reduce air resistance.
Air resistance slows down motion travelling through the air, which everything is doing except while in a vacuum.
Air Resistance is the kinetic friction of the object's surface moving through the air. In aeronautical terms this is known as drag.
two forces that can stop the forward motion are, air resistance and friction.
Resistant forces. They resist against the motion of an object, like kinetic friction.
Inertia is an objects resistance to change in motion. Frictional forces resist motion.
You don't "resist" it but you "reduce" it. For example, many vehicles and projectiles are made in a streamline design to reduce air resistance.
Air resistance slows down motion travelling through the air, which everything is doing except while in a vacuum.
Air resistance
Air Resistance is the kinetic friction of the object's surface moving through the air. In aeronautical terms this is known as drag.
Inertia.
This frictional resistance known as "air resistance" is the drag force. The drag force changes with the drag coefficient of the object in motion.
If you are falling...the air beneath u will resist you from falling even faster.
Air resistance.
air drag