Either an alarm clock or a Force (preferibly not the dark side, as that never turns out well).
An external force must act upon it, which usually is called an applied force. This may be gravity, friction, or any other types of applied forces.
Force is what makes objects move or changes their motion.
An outside force to act on it
A net applied force.
It must have a net force applied to it.
A net external force must act on it.
Force
Negative
force
That rate of change, along with the direction in which it's changing, comprise the object's acceleration.
The object's height and gravitational potential energy both increase.
Lifting an object to a greater height requires more energy, but not any more force, thanlifting it to a not-as-great height.
Changing the shape CAN change the density. If you change it into a smaller shape, then you increase the density. However the mass will not change.
It takes no force to 'move' an object. There are trillions of objects that are moving right now with no forces acting on them. It only takes force to 'accelerate' an object ... to change its motion, by changing its speed or the direction of its motion. force=mass*acceleration As mass increases, so does the force needed to change the object's motion.
Change to an elevation view so you can see your object and then choose the move object option and move it up or down as needed.
Length, Width, Height, Volume, Mass, Weight
. The amount of Force needed to make an object change its motion depends on the Mass of the object and the Force required
That rate of change, along with the direction in which it's changing, comprise the object's acceleration.
The object's height and gravitational potential energy both increase.
Lifting an object to a greater height requires more energy, but not any more force, thanlifting it to a not-as-great height.
Changing the shape CAN change the density. If you change it into a smaller shape, then you increase the density. However the mass will not change.
This is the easiest question I have ever heard of. It's obviously state change!!?
It takes no force to 'move' an object. There are trillions of objects that are moving right now with no forces acting on them. It only takes force to 'accelerate' an object ... to change its motion, by changing its speed or the direction of its motion. force=mass*acceleration As mass increases, so does the force needed to change the object's motion.
an unbalanced force
You can change the surface of the object itself
This can involve changing the shape of matter, or changing the speed or direction of an object.