muscle that push hard to wall
40 newtons
It is a muscle that has to be able to push the baby out of the mother.
In the underground laboratory of Mordred, the wall to the left is not rock, just dirt. Push hard against it and it will collapse. (see related question)
A ventral hernia is a hole in the muscle wall where the intestines can push through. This occurs if someone has lifted something heavy or has had surgeries that have weakened the muscle wall.
No. Whether I push hard against the wall of my clothes closet or against one wall of the Sears Tower in downtown Chicago, the force I apply is roughly the same in either case.
you push on the wall and the wall pushes back on you with opposite and equal force.
Not sure if this is a real physics question... but yes, pushing against a wall is tiring even though no "work" is being done. Its isometric conditioning. Think of this: Put your hands in front of you and press them together as hard as you can for as long as you can. This will tire you out pretty quick.
when you push your hand against a wall the wall is 'pushing' against you that is why you feel your hand being pushed.
It is the force of the wall pushing against your fingers. This is related to Newton's Third Law.
It's because that it needs a cell wall to push against and an animal cell doesn't have one therefore nothing to push against.
Hard Time - 2009 Against the Wall 2-5 was released on: USA: 22 February 2011
The wall on the left is made of dirt, not rock, and if you push hard it will collapse.