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The object remain stable in situ
Such an object is traveling at a constant speed in a straight line. Nothing will happen to it until the forces acting on it become unbalanced, or it runs into something.
it will keep movin at a constant speed
If the forces oppose each other then nothing will happen, if the forces are acting in the same direction then they would actually be one force, equal to the sum of the two forces, if the forces are oblique then more advanced vectors would come into play... the ones that i know well enough to use but not teach.
NothingThe velocity remains the same
Assuming this is a physics question, when all the forces acting on an object are balanced, the object is in equilibrium. For example, when a car is at a constant velocity, with no acceleration, all the forces are equal.
The object remain stable in situ
it moves with uniform velocity ... constant speed in a straight line
Such an object is traveling at a constant speed in a straight line. Nothing will happen to it until the forces acting on it become unbalanced, or it runs into something.
it will keep movin at a constant speed
Newton's first law states that an object at rest stays at rest and an object in motion stays in motion with constant velocity unless acted upon by an unbalanced force. This is also called the law of inertia. So, the forces acting on an object are balanced when the object is not accelerating. This happens when the object is at rest, or when the object is moving at constant velocity. ===================== The forces on an object are balanced when their vector sum is zero.
If two forces acting on an object are equal and opposite, then the net force acting on the object is zero. If the net force acting on an object is zero, then the object's velocity will not change. If it is already moving, then it will continue to move in a straight line at that same velocity. If it is not already moving, it will stay stationary.
It's not necessary to specify that the object is moving at a constant speed. Any object with no outside forces acting on it does that. It also continues moving in a straight line.
If the forces oppose each other then nothing will happen, if the forces are acting in the same direction then they would actually be one force, equal to the sum of the two forces, if the forces are oblique then more advanced vectors would come into play... the ones that i know well enough to use but not teach.
NothingThe velocity remains the same
"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.
Then the objects will move in the direction of the resultant force.