FRICTION
The same forces that had been trying to slow it down while it still had fuel, but were being overcome by the reaction force of the fuel burning in the engine of the rocket. Nothing has changed other than the loss of this reaction force, no new forces appeared.
Slow Down, Slow, retared
I don't see how anything can "act against momentum"; momentum is always conserved. If there is friction, the movement of the object will be slowed down; but in this case, momentum is transferred to the air, or whatever is slowing down the object in question. Total momentum will be conserved.
Usually not. To slow a moving object down, some force must act on the moving object. On Earth, this force is usually friction. In outer space, there is no significant amount of friction, so moving objects tend to continue moving, unless they are slowed down by OTHER forces, such as gravity.
It will slow down an organism's decay in freezing temperatures.
A man tumbling down a rock is accelerating due to the force of gravity, while a man sliding down is likely to experience frictional forces that slow him down. Tumbling involves the man rolling and picking up speed quickly, whereas sliding can involve more control and resistance to acceleration.
inertia and friction are the two forces that slow down a rocket
Nothing happens to the forces. The forces are what makes the thing speed up or slow down.
Friction.
The two forces that make a cyclist slow down are air resistance (drag) and friction. Air resistance occurs due to the drag force as the cyclist moves through the air, while friction between the bicycle tires and the road surface causes the bike to slow down.
Friction between the object and the surface causes its sliding motion to slow down and eventually stop. Other factors such as air resistance and any external forces acting on the object can also contribute to its deceleration and eventual halt.
Friction and drag
Air resistance (drag) and gravity are two forces that slow a rocket down. Air resistance pushes against the rocket due to its speed through the atmosphere, while gravity pulls the rocket back toward the Earth.
The same forces that had been trying to slow it down while it still had fuel, but were being overcome by the reaction force of the fuel burning in the engine of the rocket. Nothing has changed other than the loss of this reaction force, no new forces appeared.
Friction, weight, and air resistance are forces that can slow things down. Friction opposes the motion of objects sliding past each other, weight is the force due to gravity pulling objects downwards, and air resistance is caused by air pushing against objects moving through it. Upthrust, also known as buoyancy, is a force that opposes weight but typically does not slow objects down.
Two opposing forces that can slow objects down are friction and air resistance. Friction occurs when two surfaces rub against each other, while air resistance is the force exerted by air on an object moving through it. Both forces act in the opposite direction of the object's motion and can decrease its speed.
air resistance