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No. When two forces act in the same direction, they can be added together. It is only when two identical forces act in opposite directions that they cancel each other out.
No, they are not. The forces are balanced only when forces of equal magnitude are acting in the opposite direction.
The object accelerates in the direction of the force difference.
Zero.
10N if both forces are in the same direction.
No. When two forces act in the same direction, they can be added together. It is only when two identical forces act in opposite directions that they cancel each other out.
There is no net force OF the object. If the forces act in the same direction, the net force is magnitude of the net force is the sum of the forces and acts in the same direction. If the forces act in opposite directions, the magnitude of the net force will be the difference between their magnitudes and it will act in the direction of the larger of the two forces.
according to vector addition: i: if the forces are equal then they will cancel each other and body will be in equilibrium. ii: if they are not equal then they will produce a net force in particular direction.
No, they are not. The forces are balanced only when forces of equal magnitude are acting in the opposite direction.
The object accelerates in the direction of the force difference.
vector sum of the two forces.
forces can be added only when they both are going in the same direction as 2n + 2n = 4n of force in the same direction if they are 2 facing forces they would have had to be subtracted, which ever force is greater that will be the momentum of the force
Zero.
10N if both forces are in the same direction.
Magnitude and direction.
When all forces are balanced, the object is either stationairy or moving in one direction inTekkit - Episode 2 a constant speed
The result of a 40 newton force acting on one direction and a 50 newton force acting in the opposite direction would be a net force of 10 newtons, acting in the same direction as the 50 newton force. If both forces act in an opposite direction you would take one and subtract from the other. -50N i 40N i = -10N i you would add their magnitude and get a resultant of 5N. If they were added in acting in the same direction you'd have a resultant of 90N. If they were acting at angles with each other you would have to break them into x, y, and z components, add the x components with the x, y with the y, and z with the z, then take all the new values, square them all, add them, and take the root which would give you your new magnitude. (x,y,z) + (x',y',z') = (x+x', y+y', z+z') (for the new vector) the new magnitude would be Sqrt((x+x')^2+(y+y')^2+(z+z')^2)