Want this question answered?
The forces on the object must be unbalanced. When adding up ALL the Forces on an Object, If the result is not Zero, then the Object will Accelerate in the direction of the sum of the forces.
Force acts on any object. Picture yourself pushing on a brick wall.Oh! Here's an even better way to look at it ...When you pick up a brick, you know there's a force of gravity acting on it. You can feel it pulling down.If you drop the brick, the force of gravity pulls it down to the ground.When the brick is part of a wall, the same force of gravity is still acting on it, even though it can't move.==============================I don't think you'll be able to name an object that doesn't have mass. Unless you want to talk aboutthe 'object of a sentence', the 'object of a preposition', or the 'object of your affection'. Those aren'tthe kind of 'objects' that Physics means when it talks about forces.
the fundamental forces? there are 4 of those: gravity, electromagnetism, weak nuclear, and strong nuclear. If u want to know the force effects they are: 1. to start an object moving 2. to stop an object that is moving 3. speed object up 4. slow object down 5. change object shape 6. change objects direction
If you want to know what kind of energy then it is kinetic energy
There is no such thing as an amount of force needed to move a certain distance. Asteroids, comets, moons, and planets have been moving trillions of miles through space for billions of years with either no force on them at all, or no force in the direction they're moving. You may have heard of Newton's First Law. It says that an object with no forces acting on it keeps moving in a straight line at a constant speed, which is kind of another good way of saying that it can move as far as you want it to with no force on it.
-- The object can be called anything you want. -- The group of all forces acting on the object is called a balanced group of forces. -- The mechanical condition of the object is called equilibrium.
For an object to be at rest, the sum of all the forces acting on that object must be zero.If you want to formulate a question, you can base it on that.
The forces on the object must be unbalanced. When adding up ALL the Forces on an Object, If the result is not Zero, then the Object will Accelerate in the direction of the sum of the forces.
If you want to know the result of two people pushing a car with equal forces, it'sgoing to help you to know whether they're both pushing in the same direction orin opposite directions. And if you need them to move the car, I'm sure you'll knowwhich method you want them to use, and which method you don't want them to use.
Mass is an intrinsic property of an object. Anything that has mass will have gravitational force acting on it and this is what we measure when we stand on the weighting scale. If you want to know mass of any object simply divide its weight by 9.8 (gravitational constant).
Force acts on any object. Picture yourself pushing on a brick wall.Oh! Here's an even better way to look at it ...When you pick up a brick, you know there's a force of gravity acting on it. You can feel it pulling down.If you drop the brick, the force of gravity pulls it down to the ground.When the brick is part of a wall, the same force of gravity is still acting on it, even though it can't move.==============================I don't think you'll be able to name an object that doesn't have mass. Unless you want to talk aboutthe 'object of a sentence', the 'object of a preposition', or the 'object of your affection'. Those aren'tthe kind of 'objects' that Physics means when it talks about forces.
the fundamental forces? there are 4 of those: gravity, electromagnetism, weak nuclear, and strong nuclear. If u want to know the force effects they are: 1. to start an object moving 2. to stop an object that is moving 3. speed object up 4. slow object down 5. change object shape 6. change objects direction
Don't know that's what I want to know
... I think you want to know about forces. At terminal velocity, the force of gravity is balanced by the air resistance, so no further acceleration occurs (balanced forces are the equivalent of an absence of force), which is why we call it *terminal* ("end value") velocity.
If I am reading your question correctly, you want to now if balanced forces can change the direction an object is traveling. The answer is no. Balanced forces always produce no net change, hence the term "balanced". You need an unbalanced force to change the direction of an object, or to set an object in motion from a standstill.
There are no known living objects in space, so every object that we know of has not will, so they cannot "want" to go anywhere, let alone have some ability to do so. They are just subject to the forces of gravity.
she would be nice to you and always want you to be her partner