Gravity causes all types of mass movement. Mudflows, landslides, creeps, and slumps can all be causes by gravity.
gravity
Any body with mass exerts a gravitational force proportional to mass.This force is always attractive. So earth attracts all things.
No, gravity is a force of attraction acting between all objects that have mass.
Yes, On a slope, too little water may prevent sediment grains from holding together at all, thereby increasing the materials potential for movement.
Gravity causes all types of mass movement. Mudflows, landslides, creeps, and slumps can all be causes by gravity.
Gravity is the main cause of all the mass movements because it brings everything down which causes it to destroy things in its path
interchangeable parts
Balance the force on all direction and after all cancellation, the remain force give the direction the object go. For matter of speed and acceleration, check it mass and find out the acceleration from force.
Mass effect force because mass is all about force
Force is useful as without force we wouldn't be able to do almost all our activities in our daily life.where going to be so much lazy,no movement could cause no life or living
Gravity causes all the types of mass movement. :P
Yes, waterfalls, river flow, and landslides would all be examples of gravity at work.
gravity
The question doesn't really make sense. Did you mean "How does mass cause a gravitational force" or "How is mass related to inertia" or "How are gravitation and inertia related? Are they separable" or "What is the meaning of mass and the physical cause of it" I have found the best answers to all of those questions to be found in special relativity (inertia) and general relativity (gravitation and its relation to inertia)
oxnNJaJanjoNasONNsa force, motion, acceleration, mass
Hmmm. I don't think velocity is a force at all. Velocity is a vector that describes the speed and the direction of an object. It is the inertia of a mass that is related to resistance to motion. In fact, the amount of energy it takes to change an object's velocity is an indirect measure of the object's mass.