the two forces acted upon the airplane when in flight is Lift/Gravity and Thrust/Drag(:
no
The sum of the vectors of the forces must be zero.
No. Gases and liquids are matter. Matter is not a force; it is acted upon by forces. Gases and liquids can exert a force or transmit a force, but they themselves are not forces.
gravity wind resistance weight
it would stay there until an outside force acted upon it
the forces move
no
All the balanced forces acted upon me.
When there is no net force - if there are any forces, the sum of all the forces must be zero.
The sum of the vectors of the forces must be zero.
No. Gases and liquids are matter. Matter is not a force; it is acted upon by forces. Gases and liquids can exert a force or transmit a force, but they themselves are not forces.
gravity wind resistance weight
First law: The speed of the paper airplane remains constant unless acted upon by an external force. At launch, until thrown by someone, the airplane is at rest. In the air, drag (friction) is slowing the aircraft down.Second law: The airplane's acceleration at every instant is equal to the sum of all the forces on it divided by its mass.Third law: As the paper airplane's wings generate lift, they are subject to gravity. When thrown, the airplane has thrust, but drag is also generated.
it would stay there until an outside force acted upon it
it would stay there until an outside force acted upon it
it would stay there until an outside force acted upon it
When two people are pushing a box from opposite sides with equal force, the box remains stationary due to the balanced forces acting on it.