If you're traveling in a car going in a straight line then your body is moving at the same speed and in the same direction as the car. If the car then turns to the right, your body still wants to keep moving forward in a straight line so it feels like you're being thrown to the left. Even the car itself wants to keep moving in a straight line as that is the force that was acting on it. It is only the grip of the tyres on the road that pull the car to the right. This is why if a car goes around a bend to quickly it will go up on two wheels or flip over.
S waves are waves that move from side to side.
Secondary waves, or S waves move from side to side, or up and down.
Because the earing is round and goes around the lobe. So if you move one side, the other side is obviously gonna move too.
No, they can move in any direction.
if the water is moving then it will exert a force on the side of the boat. Still water will not move a boat.
centrifugal force
The wheels on the side of the direction of the turn.
juke means a sharp jerk to one side ... to make a move on a defender in an attempt to avoid being tackled.
They use their fins to glide through the water and they use their tail to move them side to side
because there is angular force....
inertiaInertia
i have a sharp pain on the bottom of my left side. is that where the baby is?
because the particle are controlled by the transverse wave which cause it to bob as it doesn't move side to side.
To the right.
My husband has this extremely sharp pain on his right side on his back, just below the rib cage. He also has had kidney stones and the pain is different than the type of pain they caused. It only hurts when he makes certain movements. He has had MRI's and an x-ray, but nothing shows up. Is it a muscle strain or does anyone else who has experienced this problem know what is causing this pain?
S waves are waves that move from side to side.
do kidney stones move side to side