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The simple answer is that it depends on the amount of compressive force, the type of material the ruler is made from, and the dimensions of the ruler. Since what I assume you're asking about is the deformation of the ruler, what you should see is that the marks on the ruler will start to get closer together as the applied compressive force increases.
It would break. Sorry if its the oppiste I dont know what kind of ruler you have.
It depends. For one, how bendy the ruler is. If it is really bendy then the eraser will not be propelled that far. If it is slightyly bendy it will go far. Second, the eraser's surface area and weight affects its flight through the air. Third, the force of the propulsion also accounts for distance. If the eraser is about 4"x2" with a moderately bendy ruler and gets an average thrust then the eraser will be propelled about 10 feet.
It is neither; a push is compression and a pull tension; in bending one surface stretches in tension and the other surface is in compression, and the n middle does nothing. There are four things you can do to an object; push or pull, bend, shear, and twist
A good example could be a tornado or twisting a sponge.
he was not necessarily a harsh ruler but one that understood what must be done to create a strong country.
Russia.
"Arcana Force Ex - the Light Ruler" and "Arcana Force EX - The Dark Ruler"
If people didn't have a strong ruler all people would be in chaos.
An absolute ruler is a ruler that has unlimited power over their country.
Thomas Hobbes said people are brutish so they need a strong ruler.
Yes, the word 'ruler' is a noun, a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a a straight strip of material marked off in units and used as a guide in drawing lines or for measuring, a word for a thing; someone who controls a country, a word for a person.
God is the ruler of everything. He controls the outcome of everyone's life.
God because after it all he is ruler of all and he controls everything
Hammurabi was such a strong ruler that after he died his civilization slowly starting to fade away
The simple answer is that it depends on the amount of compressive force, the type of material the ruler is made from, and the dimensions of the ruler. Since what I assume you're asking about is the deformation of the ruler, what you should see is that the marks on the ruler will start to get closer together as the applied compressive force increases.
Ares wasn't a ruler. Ares was God of War and a coward.