ask your parents if they are smart
Yes, the velocity of an object can reverse direction even when its acceleration is constant. This can happen when the object is subjected to an acceleration in the opposite direction to its initial velocity, causing it to slow down and eventually reverse direction.
The car's acceleration is in forward direction.
Yes, the direction of an object's velocity can reverse even when it is experiencing constant acceleration. This can happen if the acceleration is in the opposite direction to the object's initial velocity.
Acceleration is negative if the object is slowing down or moving in the opposite direction of the velocity vector.
When an object is thrown upwards, the acceleration due to gravity pulls it downwards, opposite in direction to its initial velocity. This causes the object to eventually come to a stop and reverse its direction as it falls back down.
Of course. Anything you toss with your hand has constant acceleration after you toss it ... the acceleration of gravity, directed downward. If you toss it upward, it starts out with upward velocity, which reverses and eventually becomes downward velocity.
Sure. A pendulum, a child's playground swing, and a bullet shot straight up all have constant acceleration, and all reverse direction.
When an object has velocity and acceleration in opposite directions, it means the object is slowing down. The acceleration is acting against the velocity, causing the object to decelerate. This situation can occur when an external force is applied in the opposite direction of the object's motion.
One answer to this is that all object are in motion all of the time relative to all other objects. With that said, in the context of permanent halt" the only way that an object can be perceived as "halted" is by another object with the same velocity.
The direction changes to the reverse
Yes, it can, if the initial velocity vector of an object was in opposite direction to its constant acceleration. Example: Anything you toss with your hand has constant acceleration after you toss it ... the acceleration of gravity, directed downward. If you toss it upward, it starts out with upward velocity, which reverses and eventually becomes downward velocity.
The process of maintaining the cold chain when heat sensitive items are stored and transported in the reverse direction i.e. upwards from the clinic to a depot or laboratory. This process is also used for transporting specimen samples.