The desire of an object to keep doing what it is doing is called inertia. "What it is doing" means that it is in motion or at rest,
Inertia, but you really shouldn't call it a "desire." Inertia is a property of matter, not a desire.
Inertia is the tendency of any object to maintain it's exact momentum if not influenced by any additional force.
According to the "Physics Classroom" website (refer to the link, below), an object changing its speed, whether increasing or decreasing, is said to be "accelerating".
There are 3 (I am doing physics IGCSE and my paper says state the 3 forces acting on a sinking anchor), but I only know one, upthrust!
Inertia is directly proportional to an objects mass. Inertia is the desire of objects to continue doing exactly what they are doing. The greater the mass the greater the inertia.
The desire of an object to keep doing what it is doing is called inertia. "What it is doing" means that it is in motion or at rest,
Inertia, but you really shouldn't call it a "desire." Inertia is a property of matter, not a desire.
Inertia is the tendency of any object to maintain it's exact momentum if not influenced by any additional force.
According to the "Physics Classroom" website (refer to the link, below), an object changing its speed, whether increasing or decreasing, is said to be "accelerating".
Inertia. Newton's First Law states that an object at rest will stay at rest unless acted on by an outside force and, similarly, that an object in motion will stay in motion unless acted on by an outside force.
no. u had to do bsc physics
There are 3 (I am doing physics IGCSE and my paper says state the 3 forces acting on a sinking anchor), but I only know one, upthrust!
Inertia is directly proportional to an objects mass. Inertia is the desire of objects to continue doing exactly what they are doing. The greater the mass the greater the inertia.
The answer will depend on where in the world you are doing it.
Aptitude and desire for doing sports
Get the Physics Degree FIRST; THEN study Computing after graduation.
the momentum needed to get all the way around is related to physics.