first law
The action and reaction forces occur at the same time.
Pairs!
The two forces must be equal and opposite.
No there is no difference between action and reaction forces!
The two forces occur at the same time. Sometimes it is a bit arbitrary which force you call "action", and which "reaction". Just remember that forces always occur in pairs.
In pairs. Newton's third law.
Action and reaction forces are part of Newton's third law of motion. The action force is the force exerted by one object on another, while the reaction force is the equal and opposite force exerted by the second object on the first object. These forces always occur in pairs and act on different objects.
Action-reaction forces are a pair of equal and opposite forces that occur between interacting objects. According to Newton's third law of motion, for every action force there is an equal but opposite reaction force. This means that when one object exerts a force on another object, the second object exerts an equal force in the opposite direction.
Action and reaction forces act simultaneously. For every action force, there is an equal and opposite reaction force acting on a different object. This principle is known as Newton's third law of motion.
Newton's third law states that for every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction. This means that when one object exerts a force on another object (action), the second object exerts an equal force in the opposite direction on the first object (reaction). These action and reaction forces always occur in pairs and act on different objects.
Motion - or rather acceleration - occurs as a result of a net force, meaning that the vector sum of forces on an object is non-zero. This is unrelated to "action and reaction"; please note that "action" and "reaction" occur on DIFFERENT OBJECTS.
action and reaction