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Sure. 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.
It slow down, and eventually reverse direction.
the constant speed that a freely falling object eventually reaches when the resistance of the medium through which it is falling prevents further acceleration.
Yes. A ngular acceleration is to do with something turning. Radial acceleration is linear acceleration perpendicular to the angular acceleration.
negative acceleration means that the object is accelerating in a negative direction. For instance, if an object is going at a certain velocity forward, but accelerating negatively, it would slow down and eventually start moving backwards. It's a bit of a strange concept, but I hope this helps
I am not sure what you mean by reversing a zero acceleration. An object's acceleration can, of course, change over time.
The prefix for "counteract" is "counter-".
How did Aguinaldo counteract such aggression?
A drug to counteract the poison.
To counteract means to act in opposition to, or to hinder or frustrate.
Sure. 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.
Unions have attempted to counteract the overall decline in membership by
centripetal acceleration counters the acceleration due to gravity creating an equilibrium. the EXACT same way water wont fall out of the bucket if you spin it fast enough. Gravity is also a field and decays as the distance between the two objects increases. GMm/r^2
It slow down, and eventually reverse direction.
Any force acting on an object will cause an acceleration. An acceleration implies a change in velocity. To be more precise, acceleration is the rate of change (dv/dt, which is basically change in velocity divided by time). There has to be a NET FORCE - for example, it is possible that you pull or push something, but that there is enough frictional force (acting in the opposite direction to the pull or push) to keep counteract your force, and keep the object in place.
Each sufferer has their own method to counteract their motion sickness.
The thrust of what is propelling it upwards. The forces of thrust and lift once it is going must counteract gravity and friction. Which in homemade rockets it does for a while... but it eventually falls to earth.