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Gravitational force
It depends. There are contests in egg dropping, to see how far an egg can be dropped or thrown. The dropping contest is a study in packaging the egg for the drop. So, if the egg is properly packaged, or dropped into, say, a haystack, it very well may survive the experience!
Depending on what materials you have. Making a paper cone and placing the egg in it would work!
how can you control the forces that cause an egg to break
If you are dropping one egg, cut up a trash bag so that it lays flat with four corners. Then attach each corner with a piece of stretchy string. Glue each sting to the egg, making a parachute. If you are dropping more than one egg, place the eggs in the egg carton. Then smush it with cotton balls and smush that into a box with more cotton balls. What also helps is making a bad of cotton balls and paper towels on the bottom.
Gravitational force
because the egg is fragile
The egg remained in motion until acted upon by an outside force, your finger stopping it's motion. After lifting your finger, it remained still, because you had done nothing to move it again. This is an example of inertia.
It depends. There are contests in egg dropping, to see how far an egg can be dropped or thrown. The dropping contest is a study in packaging the egg for the drop. So, if the egg is properly packaged, or dropped into, say, a haystack, it very well may survive the experience!
drop a feather
i dont no
Depending on what materials you have. Making a paper cone and placing the egg in it would work!
No, the opposite happens you will ovulate.
This level isn't that hard as it seems. First, you use the egg-dropping bird, fire it, and drop an egg on the first egg. Then use the speedy bird, fire it, tap the screen about half way toward your destination, and try to hit the third egg, and if so, the dynamite. Then use the final egg-dropping bird to hit the second and last egg.
The handkerchief protected the egg from breaking through the principle of cushioning and shock absorption. The egg wrapped in the handkerchief created a layer of padding around the fragile shell. This layer absorbed and distributed the impact forces, reducing the pressure exerted on the egg during falls or impacts. As a result, the handkerchief acted as a protective barrier, preventing the direct transfer of force to the egg and decreasing the likelihood of it breaking.
No. Not unless you carry it for 30 feet without dropping it.
how can you control the forces that cause an egg to break