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If the group of forces acting on an object is unbalanced, the object's motion always changes. The change is called "acceleration".
Yes
When the forces on an object are unbalanced, the object undergoes acceleration. Its direction is the direction of the net effective force, and its magnitude is the magnitude of the net effective force divided by the object's mass.
the unbalanced force would be balance.
When an object is at rest, the forces acting upon it are balanced - there are no unbalanced forces.
If the group of forces acting on an object is unbalanced, the object's motion always changes. The change is called "acceleration".
Yes
Displacement divided by time will give you the motion of an object that has no unbalanced force acting on it
When the entire group of forces acting on an object is unbalanced,the object will accelerate.There's no such thing as "an unbalanced force".
When the forces on an object are unbalanced, the object undergoes acceleration. Its direction is the direction of the net effective force, and its magnitude is the magnitude of the net effective force divided by the object's mass.
the unbalanced force would be balance.
In principle, any force acting on an object is unbalanced, UNLESS there is a second force in the opposite direction, acting on the same object.
If the [group of] forces on an object is unbalanced, the object accelerates.
When an object is at rest, the forces acting upon it are balanced - there are no unbalanced forces.
Yes.
acceleration
First of all, there's no such thing as an unbalanced force. A group of forces maybe balanced or unbalanced, but the forces themselves aren't.An unbalanced group of forces acting on an object causes the object's velocityto change. That means the speed or direction of its motion changes. It doesn'ttell you anything about the object's position. In order to figure that out, you'dhave to know what its speed and direction were before the unbalanced groupof forces began acting on it, and you'd also need to know the object's mass.