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balanced
result in a net force of 0 N
Balanced force means two forces are acting on opposite sides of body and that body doesn't change its position.Nothing. Zero newtons. Zilch :L
If the magnitudes of the two forces are in the same direction add. Net = 10 N + 15 N = 25 N. The net force acting on any object is the vector sum of all the forces. If the two forces are in EXACTLY the same direction the net force will be the sum of the two acting in the same direction (as shown above). If they are in EXACTLY the opposite direction, the net force will be 5N in the direction of the 15N force. If they are acting at exactly 90o to each other, the net force will be 18.028...N in the direction 33.7...o from the larger force and 56.3o from the smaller.
The min net force magnitude you can have is (20 - 12) = 8 N, when the two forces are directly opposite in directions. When the two forces align, the net force magnitude becomes the maximum, which is equal to (20 + 12) = 32 N. You can guess that the net force magnitude is somewhere between 8 N and 32 N, when the two forces are at an angle other than 0o or 180o. Let us say the larger force is A and the smaller force is B, at an angle, alpha, to one another. Then the net force magnitude, |C| = |A| + |B|*cos(alpha). The magnitude of C, |C|, depends solely on cos(alpha), since |A| and |B| are fixed. When alpha = 0o, |C|= |A| + |B| (maximal); when alpha = 180o, |C|= |A| - |B| (minimal). Note that max(cos(alpha))=1 and min(cos(alpha))=-1. ================================
balanced
my dick
If the net force is zero, the forces are also said to be balanced.
balanced
result in a net force of 0 N
is 0 N
Balanced force means two forces are acting on opposite sides of body and that body doesn't change its position.Nothing. Zero newtons. Zilch :L
You can't, unless you know both of their directions. -- If they're in the same direction, then the net force is 10N in that same direction. -- If they're in opposite directions, then the net force is zero, and the direction doesn't matter because there's no net force. -- Depending on their directions, those two forces can combine to produce a net force of anything between zero and 10 N, in any direction. So you need to know their directions in order to figure out what the net force is.
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.
How do you determine the net force on an object? Decide which direction is positive motion. Motion is the opposite direction is negative The forces must in a straight line!! Add all the forces in straight line acting on the object. Example To the right is positive A 5 N force pushes a 10 Kg object to the right. A 2 N force pushes the same 10 Kg object to the left. The 5 N forces is positive and the 2N force is negative Net force = +5 N - 2 N = + 3 N To determine the acceleration use Newton's 2nd law of motion F = Mass * acceleration + 3 N = 10 Kg * a a = 10 Kg ÷ + 3 N a = +3 ⅓ m/s^2 The positive sign means the object is accelerating to the right!! If the forces are not linear, you must use vectors, but the net force in any direction is still the sum of the vectors in that direction.
unbalanced
50 N, in the same direction as both component forces.