Inertia
An object resists changes in its motion due to its inertia, which is its tendency to maintain its current state of motion. This property is a result of the object's mass and is described by Newton's first law of motion. Inertia causes an object to resist changes in its velocity, whether that be maintaining a constant velocity or resisting acceleration.
An object's mass does not change as it moves. Mass is a measure of the amount of matter in an object, and it remains constant regardless of its motion. The property that changes with motion is the object's momentum, which is the product of mass and velocity.
Inertia is the property of any object that resists any change in its state of motion. It is described by Newton's First Law of Motion, which states that an object at rest will stay at rest, and an object in motion will stay in motion unless acted upon by an external force.
property of a body that requires force to change its state of motion
The four types of friction are static friction (force resisting motion when an object is stationary), kinetic friction (force resisting motion between two surfaces in contact), rolling friction (force resisting motion when an object is rolling on a surface), and fluid friction (force acting on an object moving through a fluid).
The tendency for an object to resist change once it is in motion is called inertia. This property is described by Newton's first law of motion, which states that an object will remain in its state of motion unless acted upon by an external force.
Inertia refers to the resistance of an object to a change in its speed or direction of motion. This property arises from the object's mass, where greater mass typically leads to greater inertia.
Neither. Inertia is not a force.
Well, there are several ways to go about answering this. Inertia is the property of an object at rest resisting motion. First: Pmomentum is the property of an object in motion to resist change in that motion. Second: Potential Energy is the property of an object at rest to begin moving, it typically results from height. Third: Kinetic Energy is the property of an object in motion to keep moving. [here both of our categories are opposite of inertia] This is likely the best bet. Any of these are good options if your answer is limited to the field of Fizex. (Then again, Quantum physics is fairly different from inertia too.) Finally: If your answer isn't related to Fizex, Waffles, Historical figures, language, and philosophy are very different from Inertial.
The transitive property of motion states that if object A is moving with respect to object B, and object B is moving with respect to object C, then object A is also moving with respect to object C. This property can be used to describe the motion of objects in a reference frame.
Anything that has mass is called matter. Matter also takes up space and exhibits the properties of inertia, that is, resisting a change in its state of motion.
No, momentum is a property of an object in motion that is determined by its mass and velocity. It does not apply a force itself, but can be used to analyze how forces acting on an object change its motion.