You may go off the road.
NO,velocity changes.
Yes, it can move in a curve.
A person walking in a circle A car going around a curve A bicyclist riding around a lake
The statement is false because when going around a curve, the motion is not in a uniform direction.
No, unless the driver is giving it more gas.
False
Whatever is going to happen around the world it will be the same in Wales, don't worry Welsh people.
needs swaybar bushings
slow down before entering and then accelerate while going around
Yes. The simplest example is an object moving at a constant speed in a circle.
right
Rivers "carry" their sediment load only as long as the velocity of the water remains high enough to create sufficient turbulence to keep the particles "stirred up". Once a river loses its velocity and the stirring effect of the turbulence subsides the sediment load can no longer remain suspended in the water. At this point gravity takes over and the river begins to "drop" its sediments in a process named deposition.Now a river going around a curve is like two tires at each end of an axle going around a curve. The tire on the outside of the curve has to move faster than the tire on the inside of the curve since it has a longer radius of travel. So too the water in the river moves faster at the outside of the curve than the water inside the curve. Between the two different water velocities the deposition is going to occur on the inside curve of the river where the water loses its velocity.Conversely, the opposite of deposition which is erosion will take place at the outside of the curve in the river.