Normal Force
The downward force of gravity, and the normal force perpendicular to the slide.
Perpendicular force means they act at right angles to each other, while the resultant is the summation of all the forces acting. The determination of the resultant force often needs vector calculus .
No, the force in tension of a string is not conservative. The only non-conservative force acting is the tension force, but it acts perpendicular to the path of the object at every instant, and so it does zero work.
False. You will know nothing at all about any force acting perpendicular to the direction of motion.
The total net force on an aircraft in flight is usually studied in terms of four perpendicular componentsreferred to as lift, weight, thrust, and drag.
Gravity is a force acting down on it. A normal force is acting perpendicular to the ground at the base of the structure.
Gravity is a force acting down on it. A normal force is acting perpendicular to the ground at the base of the structure.
no. a force acting perpendicularly on a body cannot cancel a force which is acting horizontally on the same body.!!!!
The downward force of gravity, and the normal force perpendicular to the slide.
Lift is the force that acts upwards, perpendicular to the chord of the wing. Thrust is the force acting perpendicular to the propeller disc.
That is difficult to answer in that a horizontal force may be perpendicular to the body. So, the question does not differentiate between "can a vertical force cancel a horizontal force?" and "can a horizontal force cancel a horizontal force?" The best answer is, yes: two opposite and equal horizontal forces, both perpendicular to a body, will cancel each other.
Perpendicular force means they act at right angles to each other, while the resultant is the summation of all the forces acting. The determination of the resultant force often needs vector calculus .
Only if the wire is running perpendicular to a magnetic field.
Stress is a force acting on certain area. Stress equals force divided by area.
No, the force in tension of a string is not conservative. The only non-conservative force acting is the tension force, but it acts perpendicular to the path of the object at every instant, and so it does zero work.
it doesn't have enough force to brake the surface tension
foliation