Correct, the vectors of all forces summed equaling zero mean the forces are balanced, though it could be argued that an object with no forces acting on it has zero net forces, but it's rather hard to balance nothing with more nothing,
If the net force is zero, then the forces are balanced. If the net force is not zero, then the forces are not balanced. You can have a balanced pair of forces, but not a pair of balanced forces.
When forces are balanced, the net force is zero.
When a pair of balanced forces acts on an object, the net force that results is equal to zero.
Net force is the overall force acting on an object when all individual forces are taken into account. Balanced forces occur when the net force on an object is zero, meaning the object remains at rest or moves at a constant velocity. In contrast, unbalanced forces cause acceleration or deceleration of an object.
When a pair of balanced forces act on an object, the net force is zero. This means that the forces cancel each other out, resulting in no acceleration of the object.
yes
The forces are all balanced.
The the forces are unbalanced, that means that the net force is non-zero.
The forces are all balanced.
An object at rest, or an object with a constant velocity are the two possible states of an object with zero net force. An object with zero acceleration has zero net force. There many be several forces acting on the object, such as the force of gravity and the normal force of the ground. Even though an object sitting on the ground has two forces acting on it (gravity, and the normal force) the object does not accelerate because these forces are equal and opposite. An object with zero net force has all forces acting on it equally balanced and cancelling out
If all forces acting on the object are balanced (equal), the net force acting on the object is zero.
When the forces are balanced, the net force is zero, by definition. "Net force" refers to the vector sum of all the forces acting on an object.