No, a force is not a motion. A force may produce motion of a mass.
No, motion is not a force. Motion is a change of coordinates. However, motion usually is a result of applying a force.
A force that maintains motion is called inertia. This is the same as to what is normally referred to as momentum.
An object in motion stays in motion because it requires a force to change the motion. No force, no change.
The Centripetal Force
If a force is acting at an angle to the direction of motion then it is usually helpful to study components of the force along the line of motion and at right angles to it. For a force of magnitude f, acting at an angle x with the line of motion, the component along that line is f*cos(x).
No, a force is not a motion. A force may produce motion of a mass.
No, motion is not a force. Motion is a change of coordinates. However, motion usually is a result of applying a force.
Force has size, which is how much force put into somethig, e.g., 10 Newtons of force. It has motion because force is basically motion, because force can be unbalanced or balanced, and unbalanced causes motion, and is basically motion.
FRICTION and inertia that force can have on motion
A force that maintains motion is called inertia. This is the same as to what is normally referred to as momentum.
An object in motion stays in motion because it requires a force to change the motion. No force, no change.
When a force is acted on an object the motion changes. Newtons 2nd law of motion states: An object in motion will stay in motion, and an object out of motion will stay out of motion, unless met with an unbalanced force. If a force is aplied to an object in motion it either accelerates, or it will stop once met with sed unbalanced force.
Force that resists motion is frictional force, viscous drag
A force that resists motion is inertia.
Unbalanced force
The Centripetal Force