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The action is throwing the ball up in the air and the reaction is catching it in your hands. Further, the action caused the reaction to occur; forces acted in pairs.
The action force is your hand moving back. The reaction force is the ball moving the other way.
This is Newtons 3rd Law. "For every action force there is an equal and opposite reaction force." So, the action is your hand applying a force to the wall, and the reaction is the wall pushing back with an equal force.
One pair of forces is your hand pushing against the wind, and the wind pushing back against your hand.Another pair of forces is gravity from Earth pulling your hand down, and your hand pulling up against Earth; but this doesn't depend on the fact that the car is moving.
Because the table applied the same force back to your hand, this is what the third law of motion states (for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction), so if you hit the table with a 100 Newton's your hand receives the exact same force
when you push your hand against a wall the wall is 'pushing' against you that is why you feel your hand being pushed.
The action is throwing the ball up in the air and the reaction is catching it in your hands. Further, the action caused the reaction to occur; forces acted in pairs.
Not in the sense I think you are asking. The force is your hand and the pushing against the handle. The reaction is the handle moving. It's true, your push on the handle lets water in, but that is a reaction to the faucet opening. I'm not sure action/reaction can apply to this because what do you use to bracket the equation? You can keep expanding both sides of it. You opening the handle cause a pump miles away to pump a little bit harder to make up for the pressure loss.
wheelbarrow on ground : action force is its weight reaction force is the force from the ground When u push on a wall: action is the force u push with reaction force is the force exerted by the wall
The action force is your hand moving back. The reaction force is the ball moving the other way.
This is Newtons 3rd Law. "For every action force there is an equal and opposite reaction force." So, the action is your hand applying a force to the wall, and the reaction is the wall pushing back with an equal force.
One pair of forces is your hand pushing against the wind, and the wind pushing back against your hand.Another pair of forces is gravity from Earth pulling your hand down, and your hand pulling up against Earth; but this doesn't depend on the fact that the car is moving.
This is an example of Newton's third law of motion, which states that for every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction. In this case, the boxer's hand hitting the wall is the action, and the force that the wall exerts back on the hand is the reaction, resulting in the injury to the hand.
Because when you push it you are pushing downward which is causing more drag against the surface.
1. Inertia 2. Friction 3. A force when you move your pen or hand
The reflex action of burning your hand would be jerking your hand away from the source of the heat
Because the table applied the same force back to your hand, this is what the third law of motion states (for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction), so if you hit the table with a 100 Newton's your hand receives the exact same force