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How does air exert a push or pull?

Updated: 9/16/2023
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Q: How does air exert a push or pull?
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When you pull on a window shade you exert?

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How is that force either a push or pull?

It is a 'pull' when you are falling, the gravity 'pulls' you down. But the Air resistance will 'push' you back up, making a force either a push or a pull


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Does air push up on a kite or a plane?

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Why does a force require an interaction of objects?

The answer is simple. A force is a push or pull on something. If there is no something, then there is nothing to push or pull. So right off there must be at least the one object...the something that gets pushed or pulled. But now we get to...what's doing the pushing or pulling? And there we have a requirement for that second object. And that's why there is that "interaction." There has to be a pusher/puller and it has to push/pull something. There're the two objects. EX: If you push out ahead with your hands, the first object, you exert no force with that push because there is no second object. But if you do that same push but up against the wall of your office, you exert a force onto that wall, which is the second object.