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An unbalanced force produces a change in motion which means an object moves. In balanced forces, the net force is 0 and the object does not move.
There's no such thing as "an unbalanced force".When the group of forces acting on an object is unbalanced, then the objectaccelerates, in the direction of the vector sum of the forces.
An unbalanced force causes a change in the motion of the object that the forces are acting on. It causes acceleration, which can be positive or negative, depending on the direction of the reultant force. Positive means that the object is gaining acceleration and reaching a higher instantaneous velocity every second, while negative means that it's getting slower per second (braking, for instance). Both are examples of motion.
Consider an object in empty space. There are two forces pushing from opposite sides, one force (force A) on the left pushing with 2 newtons of force, the other (force B) on the right pushing with 1 newton. Since force A is pushing with a greater force than force B, the result will be the object moving right. The object is also moving with a force of 1 newton, because force A is 1 newton greater than force B.
An object will accelerate if and only if there is a net force acting on the object.
An unbalanced force will always make an object accelerate. If the object is at rest, it will start moving.
An unbalanced force will always make an object accelerate. If the object is at rest, it will start moving.
An unbalanced force produces a change in motion which means an object moves. In balanced forces, the net force is 0 and the object does not move.
unbalanced
unbalanced
There's no such thing as "an unbalanced force".When the group of forces acting on an object is unbalanced, then the objectaccelerates, in the direction of the vector sum of the forces.
The object accelerates in the direction that the greater force is pushing or pulling it.any object is acted upon by an unbalanced force will make the object move with the unbalanced force as there is not the right amount of the other force to stop it.if they were balanced forces the object would find equilibrium and would end up basically being held in one place, or travel on one vector without changing course.As for an object under the effect of unbalanced forces? It would NOT behave like the one described above. that is all that could be said.The object accelerates in the direction of the 'net' force ... the vector sum of allof the individual forces. The rate of acceleration is proportional to the magnitudeof the net force.It (the motion) is changed.(Your last it being the object ... I hope).when an unbalanced force act on a moving object, the velocity of the object will change.When an unbalanced force acts on an object, the object will accelerate. This is a fundamental law of physics that goes back to Newton. Further, the object will move in the direction of the unbalanced force.We know that force is equal to mass times acceleration (F = m x a). If force is applied, the object is accelerated in the direction that the force moves it. If force increases, the object will accelerate more because acceleration must also increase.There's no such thing as "an unbalanced force".When the group of forces acting on an object is unbalanced, then the objectaccelerates, in the direction of the vector sum of the forces.
The definition of unbalanced force is a force that together can equal a certain number and will make a change of the objects motion. or an unequal balance of forces on an object
An unbalanced force causes a change in the motion of the object that the forces are acting on. It causes acceleration, which can be positive or negative, depending on the direction of the reultant force. Positive means that the object is gaining acceleration and reaching a higher instantaneous velocity every second, while negative means that it's getting slower per second (braking, for instance). Both are examples of motion.
An object will accelerate if and only if there is a net force acting on the object.
Consider an object in empty space. There are two forces pushing from opposite sides, one force (force A) on the left pushing with 2 newtons of force, the other (force B) on the right pushing with 1 newton. Since force A is pushing with a greater force than force B, the result will be the object moving right. The object is also moving with a force of 1 newton, because force A is 1 newton greater than force B.
No. Energy is what allows you to work. Force, however, is a push or pull or something that tries to make something else move. When forces are balanced, an object stays where it is, when the forces are unbalanced, the object moves.