Friction always want to retard the motion of a moving object. So friction slows down and finally stops a moving object.
Friction will slow down the moving object
Friction will slow down the moving object
All friction affects a moving object, the source of the friction and the object moving is irrelevant. Water on a soccer ball would effect the performance of the ball.
Friction does not affect inertia, but it affects momentum. Momentum is the product of the mass of an object and its speed. Friction forces, if present, will always act to decrease the momentum of a moving object.
Any and every object that's moving through air at speed is affected by air friction.
The object would not cease moving, as there is no friction to act like a brake.
The friction produced that stops an object moving when force is applied is 'static friction'.
No. The speed of the object does not affect the amount of friction between an object and the surface. Friction is affected by the types of surfaces in contact, smoother surfaces produce less friction, and the weight of the object moving horizontally affects the resistance relative to the two surfaces in contact. Greater weight causes greater resistance.
Static friction is the force that acts on an object that is not moving. Other kinds of friction include fluid friction and rolling friction.
The motion of the object might slow down or just change itself object would resist moving or keep moving. An object can have static friction, sliding friction, or rolling friction.
static friction
Static friction. The frictional force is greater then the force applied, meaning the object can't move.