The action and reaction forces occur at the same time.
a reaction force
In accordance with Newton's third law of motion, the reaction force occurs simultaneously with the action force. When one object exerts a force on another object, the second object exerts an equal and opposite force back on the first object in the same instant.
A reaction force is a type of contact force that occurs in response to an action force. It acts in the opposite direction to the action force, according to Newton's third law of motion.
The two forces occur at the same time. Sometimes it is a bit arbitrary which force you call "action", and which "reaction". Just remember that forces always occur in pairs.
According to Newton's third law of motion, when an action force is applied on an object, the object will simultaneously apply a reaction force of equal magnitude but in the opposite direction on the object that exerted the action force. This means the reaction force occurs instantaneously when the action force is applied.
No, a reaction force is not a contact force. It is a force that occurs when an object interacts with its environment or another object, and it is equal in magnitude and opposite in direction to the action force.
Motion - or rather acceleration - occurs as a result of a net force, meaning that the vector sum of forces on an object is non-zero. This is unrelated to "action and reaction"; please note that "action" and "reaction" occur on DIFFERENT OBJECTS.
The reaction force occurs simultaneously with an action force as dictated by Newton's third law of motion. It is the force that a surface exerts in response to an object pressing against it.
A reaction is not a separate force; it is a force that occurs as a response to an action. In the context of contact forces, a reaction force is the force exerted by an object in response to a force acting on it. It is a contact force that arises due to the physical interaction between two objects.
An action is the initial force or movement that occurs, while a reaction is the response or consequence that follows the action. Actions are typically intentional and within our control, whereas reactions are often instinctive or automatic.
"action/reaction" does not mean " force". "Applying force" is an action, not the force itself. So, applying force will create a reaction, which may or may not balance the applied force.
Answer this question… If the action force is a player kicking a Soccer ball then what is the reaction force?