What force is act when ball is going to be thorn
The force that acts on a ball when in the air is gravity.
The forces acting on a flying ball are:1. The frictional force exerted by air on the motion of the ball.2. The gravitational force of the earth, of course.
You get frictional force. That is because when the tennis ball furr and the grass rubs together you et friction.
Friction always acts in the direction opposite to the the motion of the object.For example, if a bowling ball rolls to the right, friction would act to the left.Without friction, if you threw a ball, it would keep going forever. Friction slows objects down.
no force act on it
The force that acts on a ball when in the air is gravity.
The force that acts on a ball when in the air is gravity.
The forces acting on a flying ball are:1. The frictional force exerted by air on the motion of the ball.2. The gravitational force of the earth, of course.
Generally, only two forces act on a rolling ball. Gravity and friction (there has to be friction because without it, the ball would just slide). These are pointed directly in the x and y directions. If the ball is rolling down a slope, you can use trigonometry to find the force components.
You get frictional force. That is because when the tennis ball furr and the grass rubs together you et friction.
Show a picture of a football player kicking a ball.
We might say that an unbalanced force causes a ball to start moving. If a ball is resting on a surface, gravity is pulling down and the surface is pushing up against it. Things (forces) are in balance and the ball is still. Drop the surface out from under the ball and that ball begins to fall as gravity has no opposing force to balance it.Any lateral force on the ball that can overcome its rolling resistance will cause the ball to move. The inertia of the ball is such that it "wants" to remain at rest. Some unbalanced force will have to act on the ball to cause it to start moving. A ball on a pool table sits still until struck by a cue or another ball. It takes an "outside" force to "unbalance" the forces acting on a ball that is at rest to cause it to move.
Friction always acts in the direction opposite to the the motion of the object.For example, if a bowling ball rolls to the right, friction would act to the left.Without friction, if you threw a ball, it would keep going forever. Friction slows objects down.
no force act on it
The electric force, the magnetic force and gravity, all act at a distance.The electric force, the magnetic force and gravity, all act at a distance.The electric force, the magnetic force and gravity, all act at a distance.The electric force, the magnetic force and gravity, all act at a distance.
Friction with the grass and air will eventually bring the ball to a stop.
As far as I understand the direction of the force of air resistance acts in the opposite way to which you are going... In other words if a ball was thrown up at 20 m/s and the force of air resistance was 1m/s2 then for every second the ball goes up, it would slow down by 1m/s (assuming there was no gravity). The same applies if it was going down at 20 m/s it would slow down by 1m/s. When a parachutist opens a parachute, gravity tries to pull it down and air resistance keep it up.I think so.