No, the two are entirely different concepts.
it is not
Yes. Inertia is what holds an object in motion from falling faster than the object falling at the same time. Say you have a brick and a feather. Which falls faster? Neither. You see, inertia contributes with the third law of motion, meaning an object at rest will stay at rest until a net zero force acts upon it. Meaning that inertia is that net zero force keeping that object at rest still. Now, if you dropped a brick off of the building at the same time as the feather, inertia would keep the brick from falling faster than the feather because of its speed. Gravity is pulling the object toward earth and inertia is holding it back. Same for the feather except theres less inertia because of the weight of the feather.More Speed= More inertia. Keep that in mind.
The law of inertia (or newton's first law) states that a body remains stationary or moves with constant velocity if the net force that acts on it is zero.
Inertia resists acceleration. Inertia resists a change in the state of motion of a particle or rigid body. For instance, in order for the state of motion of an object to change, there must be a net external force exerting on the object, which is defined as mass times acceleration. Resistance to this net external force would therefore have to resist the object's acceleration, and that is inertia.
When the object is at rest, the acceleration is zero. so the net total force acting on the body from all directions should be zero. when the object is moving with constant velocity, the acceleration is zero, so in this case too, after the motion is started, the force on the body should be zero. when the velocity is increasing, some acceleration is present, so some force should be present in the direction of the motion. These are the various cases which can be explained by the equation: Force = Mass * Acceleration. here the mass remains constant, so acceleration depends on the net force
Inertia will not be affected when "net" or "net force" is zero.
it is not
Inertia will not be affected when "net" or "net force" is zero.
yes, the physics of inertia apply everywhere that inertia will be
Force and inertia are not the same. They are quite different. They do both have a relationship to the motion of objects having mass.
It describes motion when net force is zero.
Balanced forces mean the net force is zero, so they are not the same unless net force is zero. Net force is the vector sum of all forces on an object
Yes. Inertia is what holds an object in motion from falling faster than the object falling at the same time. Say you have a brick and a feather. Which falls faster? Neither. You see, inertia contributes with the third law of motion, meaning an object at rest will stay at rest until a net zero force acts upon it. Meaning that inertia is that net zero force keeping that object at rest still. Now, if you dropped a brick off of the building at the same time as the feather, inertia would keep the brick from falling faster than the feather because of its speed. Gravity is pulling the object toward earth and inertia is holding it back. Same for the feather except theres less inertia because of the weight of the feather.More Speed= More inertia. Keep that in mind.
The law of inertia (or newton's first law) states that a body remains stationary or moves with constant velocity if the net force that acts on it is zero.
Inertia resists acceleration. Inertia resists a change in the state of motion of a particle or rigid body. For instance, in order for the state of motion of an object to change, there must be a net external force exerting on the object, which is defined as mass times acceleration. Resistance to this net external force would therefore have to resist the object's acceleration, and that is inertia.
Force does not affect inertia in general. Inertia can basically be identified with the mass.
Unless acted on by an unbalanced force, an object will maintain a constant velocity