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That depends, in what direction it is moving initially, and at what speed. Inertia is the tendency to MAINTAIN a velocity.
It will travel in the direction of the velocity. I guess learning physics pays off....
Theoretically absoluteley yes. It is an object with a known position velocity and direction so why not?
To escape the gravitation pull of an object you must travel at or in excess of the escape velocity. The direction of the escape velocity is always radially outward from the center of the object.
An object will continue to travel at constant speed unless acted on by an unbalanced force, and for every force acted on there is an equal opposite reaction in the other way. So the speed and direction of the object will be changed.Source(s):F=MA
That depends, in what direction it is moving initially, and at what speed. Inertia is the tendency to MAINTAIN a velocity.
counter to the earth's rotation Exactly wrong..........it travels WITH the Earths rotation.....eastwards
It would depend on the objects location, time, and the gravitational pull on the object.
Speed and direction together are an object's velocity.
[object Object]
It will travel in the direction of the velocity. I guess learning physics pays off....
When an object is moving in a particular direction, air resistance will be acting on the object in the opposite direction to the direction of travel.
Velocity
That's the object's 'velocity'.
you need to go south due to the earths gravitational pull
inward
Velocity is a vector. You need both speed and direction