a train can't fly.
Fly or take the train.
no becaus it would fly away but you can try no becaus it would fly away but you can try no becaus it would fly away but you can try
it depends: if the fly is stopping a train the size of a period or if the fly istrying to stop a 10-ton train.===========================Actually it would seem that a fly traveling exactly opposite to thedirection of a moving 10-ton train and colliding with it would have theeffect of stopping the train dead still...at least for a micro-milli-second.Consider the velocity of the fly relative to the track. It is intuitive that uponimpact, the fly's velocity accelerates to zero and then accelerates in theopposite direction to match the velocity of the train.But if it is at the moment of impact of the fly and the train when the fly'svelocity relative to the track is zero...and since the fly is in contact with thetrain at that instant of impact...then the velocity of the train relative to thetrack must also be zero. Right?==================================I don't think so, if we're talking about a train moving at speeds we'dconsider normal:The train stops the fly for a micro second before the fly reverses direction,that's true, and perhaps the fly's momentum slows a portion of the traindirectly in contact with the fly in an elastic-like collision (forming amolecular-sized temporary indentation). But the bulk of the forces of thecollision are borne by the fly, who's body is deformed and splattered by therapid change in direction.However, a fly can stop a train, if the fly's momentum is equal to or greaterthan that of the train: e.g. if the train's velocity is so small that it's momentumis less than that of the fly flying directly at it. This would be a train moving soslowly it would be imperceptible to us.====================================Relatively-Useless Contribution #4:If the train is under power, then the answer is a big fat undebatable 'no',because the train's engines deliver more power than the fly can ever match.But if the train is coasting, then the fly simply needs to apply a constant forceagainst the front of the locomotive, and keep applying it until the product of(the force applied) x (the distance the train rolls while the force is applied)is equal to the kinetic energy the train had when the fly arrived. Nothing to it.
Simple you can't. They are the type of bird that can't fly.
fly in a house of school?
You can't take a train directly from the Shetland Islands to London. You can't even fly directly between Shetland and London. You could travel by boat from Shetland to Aberdeen and then take a train or fly from there to London or you could fly from Shetland to Edinburgh and either fly or take a train from Edinburgh to London.
A fly is a decomposer but not in the tundra.
Fly.
there are 8 chromosomes in an adult house fly.
You cannot get a train from Zürich to Dubai. You have to fly.
Question is too vague: from which train to which court house?