Friction, gravity, wind resistence(form of friction)
Fiction: between the tires and the road. the car with the air in the drivetrain
AnswerYes, but usually for most wheels it's minimal
roll a car down a hill
momentum As the speed of a rolling ball is increasing, the increasing speed is accompanied by: a. increasing momentum.
i think this happens due to friction between the ground and the toy car :)
Fiction: between the tires and the road. the car with the air in the drivetrain
Time affects speed because if the time is frozen no one can run or a car does not have speed
AnswerYes, but usually for most wheels it's minimal
roll a car down a hill
If you are talking about a car rolling down a ramp then yes. The taller the ramp the more momentum the car will create there for the car will travel farther and faster.
momentum As the speed of a rolling ball is increasing, the increasing speed is accompanied by: a. increasing momentum.
-- a car on cruise control rolling along at a constant speed on a straight section of highway -- a golf ball or squash ball rolling across the gym floor at a constant speed
its not a ghost car, its a car in a high speed, maybe the driver jump off the car and it keeps rolling down the hill. just a wreck car i think so.
Many factors affect the speed of a car, some of the most common are:the motive force that the engine of the vehicle producesThe cumulative affects of drag and friction, which act to slow the car downHope this helped
Distance does not affect the average speed. A car can travel 1 kilometre at an average speed of 60 km per hour, or it can travel 100 km at the same average speed.
Yes,if you are going at 100 mph and you go down a steep hill your speed on speedometer does not go higher but your car actually gains speed no it does not, the height of the ramp affects the distance ,not the speed.Laws of physics apply here.
Speed affects the frequency and pressure affects the wavelength.