The law of Conservation of energy, Newton's First law. This law requires the objects acceleration be zero, thus constant velocity.
The LAW of acceleration doesn't change anything; a physical law just describes how things work. Acceleration means change of speed. Or, to me more accurate, it means the rate of change of velocity - in other words, how fast velocity changes.
Rest. At rest denotes a constant velocity including velocity of zero. Newton's Law says that a body will change its velocity ,accelerate or decelerate, only when an external force is applied. No force, no acceleration, no change in velocity. At rest itself denotes no force.
The gas pedal, the brake pedal, and the steering wheel all do.
"Balanced forces" means that the net force is zero. In such as case, according to Newton's First Law, the velocity doesn't change over time.
The Law of Inertia means , No force, No Acceleration (change in velocity) and Vice verso No acceleration (change in velocity), No Force.
That is Newton's First Law.
Velocity.
The law of Conservation of energy, Newton's First law. This law requires the objects acceleration be zero, thus constant velocity.
No. I assume you mean Newton's Second Law; this law - in the form it is commonly teached in schools - states that F=ma. Assuming mass is constant, that would make force proportional to acceleration - not to velocity. Acceleration is the rate of change of velocity.
Newton's Second law involves acceleration which is changing the velocity. Velocity can be changed in two ways, direction or speed, so Newton's Law applies to both.
Snell's law is a description of the relationship between the angles of incidence and refraction. Instantaneous Velocity is the velocity at one point.
Not directly. But as the term 'law of MOTION', it involves velocity and its principles one way or another
There is no such thing as a "Law of Acceleration", at least, not in the sense of a commonly accepted physical law. There is a definition of acceleration as the rate of change of velocity (in symbols: a = dv/dt). Then, there are several formulae that relate acceleration, final velocity, initial velocity, time, etc. Perhaps you are referring to Newton's Second Law, which also involves acceleration (a = F/m, that is, acceleration = force divided by mass).
The LAW of acceleration doesn't change anything; a physical law just describes how things work. Acceleration means change of speed. Or, to me more accurate, it means the rate of change of velocity - in other words, how fast velocity changes.
Rest. At rest denotes a constant velocity including velocity of zero. Newton's Law says that a body will change its velocity ,accelerate or decelerate, only when an external force is applied. No force, no acceleration, no change in velocity. At rest itself denotes no force.
Newton 2nd Law is the answer