Want this question answered?
I think you mean the centrifugal force. That force points outwards from the center of rotation.
It is a ficticious force, which seems to push things outward from the center, when objects move in circular movement - or, more generally, in a curve.
It is a ficticious force, which seems to push things outward from the center, when objects move in circular movement - or, more generally, in a curve.
Political Economical Religious Social Interactions Artistic OPTIONAL: Natural Geography to make P.E.R.S.I.A.N.
if you mean "force that causes an object to go in a circle", that is called Centrifugal force.an object in motion stays in motion correct? Centrifugal force is where an object is traveling trough space and wants to move in a straight line, and an outside force doesn't allow the object to move outside of a set boundary by pulling on it. like gravity keeping the Earth in orbit around the Sun, or the Moon around the Earth
centrifugal force is one...or do you mean...push/pullthere is many diffrent answers try to ask a bit more detailed
Assuming you mean an object rotating around a point (i.e. on a string), no. If they did, the object would maintain a constant velocity, but because the direction changes, the velocity does too.
It means that when it is wiped and cleaned
element of geography mean what is in that story and what is it about or in the sentence
If it's going at a constant speed then it is not accelerating. To accelerate would mean to have a rate of change for speed in some direction. If the ball is going outward while traveling at a constant speed due to centrifugal force then it is accelerating. If it's going inwards due to some ground angle then it is also accelerating. From Newton's laws we know that to have a circular motion, an object must be subject to a force directed to the centre of the structure and is accelerating in that direction. This centrifugal force, exerted by the structure to the ball, is opposite in direction and magnitude to the 'fictitious' centrifugal force.
civic and geography
The term "centrifical" is a word without a definition; some would say a non-existent word. It might have the same definition as "ncauvjnscc" or "oioushc" or any other made up babble you chose to imagine. However, the term has been used enough in common parlance as to associate its meaning with either "centripetal" or "centrifugal". The centripetal force is the force applied to a linearly travelling (straight line) object to make it travel in a curve or to make it rotate about some center point. The force is applied to the object make it move toward that center point. The centrifugal force is referred to as the opposite force to the centripetal force following Newtons Law of equal and opposite reaction. However, this force is a consequence of the inertia of the object (resistance to the circular motion) and acts on the source of the centripetal force, NOT the object experiencing curved motion. The centrifugal force is equal, but opposite, the centripetal force. For instance, a weight on a string attached to an object swung about your head experiences a force applied inward (centripetal force) due to your hand (the center point) applying the force. The string also experiences this force all along its length. Your hand experiences a force applied outward (centrifugal force) due to the weights inertia (resistance to change direction at all points in time as it moves in a circle). The string also experiences this force all along the string. The opposing forces on the string keeps the string in tension. Additionally, your feet share a friction force against the surface you stand on equal to the centripetal force to keep you stationary. So the question remains: which force did you really mean, centripetal or centrifugal?