Yes. You have to be traveling with the flow of traffic. A bicycle is considered a vehicle therefore all the same moving laws of a car apply to a bicycle while on the road.
You should bike with traffic, in the same direction as cars are moving.
It is illegal to disobey traffic control devices. It is not illegal to avoid them. Georgia's traffic laws are in Title 40 of the GA code. Most moving violations are listed in sections 5 and 6.
No, not if you are adhering to existing traffic laws and doing so safely.
So-called "moving" tickets are misdemeanor offenses and you can be fingerprinted if you are in custody.
You are not moving relative to the bicycle.
Depending on the state traffic laws may vary as well as fines. Most states will lower the ticket to the a moving violation if it is a first offense.
It is your momentum of moving forward that has to be overcome before your brakes can bring the bicycle to a stop.
A light bike is easier to get moving.
You stir the paddles and the wheel start moving.
Since it is a moving violation, and your desire to have the points removed from your driving record, then traffic school is the way to go. Otherwise, that violation will stick on your permanent driving record for 39 months.
Yes, gravity acts on a moving bicycle. Gravity pulls the bicycle and the rider toward the center of the Earth, influencing their motion. This force helps to keep the bicycle in contact with the ground and affects its acceleration and speed.
It is easier to stop a bicycle than a car with the same speed because the bicycle has less mass and momentum compared to the car. The car's greater mass and momentum make it harder to stop quickly. The car's brakes also have to work against greater inertia, requiring more force and distance to stop.