Yes, anything on the surface of the planet which is at rest exerts a force on the ground and the ground exerts a force on it.
When you stand still . . . The sole of your shoe exerts a downward force equal to your weight against the ground. The ground exerts an upward force equal to your weight against the sole of your shoe. The net force where the sole of your shoe meets the ground is zero, which is the reason that your shoe doesn't accelerate vertically.
When you stand still . . . The sole of your shoe exerts a downward force equal to your weight against the ground. The ground exerts an upward force equal to your weight against the sole of your shoe. The net force where the sole of your shoe meets the ground is zero, which is the reason that your shoe doesn't accelerate vertically.
A
buoyancy is the upward force that water exerts on an object. :)
Yes, anything on the surface of the planet which is at rest exerts a force on the ground and the ground exerts a force on it.
yes
Your feet exert a force on the ground so in return the ground exerts a force on your feet.
When you stand still . . . The sole of your shoe exerts a downward force equal to your weight against the ground. The ground exerts an upward force equal to your weight against the sole of your shoe. The net force where the sole of your shoe meets the ground is zero, which is the reason that your shoe doesn't accelerate vertically.
When you stand still . . . The sole of your shoe exerts a downward force equal to your weight against the ground. The ground exerts an upward force equal to your weight against the sole of your shoe. The net force where the sole of your shoe meets the ground is zero, which is the reason that your shoe doesn't accelerate vertically.
Yes, a pile of soil sitting on the ground exerts force on the ground beneath it. The soil has mass, and gravity pulls it down on the whatever is under it. A red ant standing atop the pile of soil exerts an extra force on it, to continue the figure.
...he exerts against the ground
Gravitational force exerts an attraction on objects.
Yes. Of course, the ground exerts an equal-abd-opposite compressive force on you.===========================Answer #2:Experiment:-- Place a raw egg between the ground and your foot.-- What did you observe ? Was there any evidenceof a compressive force anywhere ?
in which situation you exert more force downward, standing or lying horizantilly?
A
buoyancy is the upward force that water exerts on an object. :)