It depends on whether it accelerates or not.
If you blow on a tissue, it will probably move in the direction that you are blowing, because the force of your breath is greater than the force of static friction. Thus, it is accelerating, and unbalanced force is being exerted on it.
But if you were to blow on a car battery, it probably wouldn't move. The static friction would balance out the force of your air, so it wouldn't accelerate. In this case, the force isn't unbalanced.
When the forces on an object are balanced, then they have the same effect on itas NO FORCE at all would have. That means that the object does not accelerate,and THAT means that it continues moving in a straight line, at a constant speed.If that didn't blow your mind, then please read it again. One of the things it tells usis that it doesn't take ANY FORCE to keep an object moving.
When dandelion seeds get blow by the wind, they get randomly distributed.
Yes . . . hurricane winds blow in a circular fashion, meaning that at almost every point around the hurricane the wind is blowing in a different direction. Winds in the front blow nearly opposite the winds in back, for example.
Impact causes an asteroid to blow up because when it hits a bigger solid surface like earth the force causes the fire that was burning it, because of our ozone layer, to spread apart and the meteor shatters making it seem like we were hit by a fireball.
Because they are forced only by the pressure gradient force and the coriolis effect. If friction were involved, they would by angled accordingly.
When the forces on an object are balanced, then they have the same effect on itas NO FORCE at all would have. That means that the object does not accelerate,and THAT means that it continues moving in a straight line, at a constant speed.If that didn't blow your mind, then please read it again. One of the things it tells usis that it doesn't take ANY FORCE to keep an object moving.
When the forces on an object are balanced, then they have the same effect on itas NO FORCE at all would have. That means that the object does not accelerate,and THAT means that it continues moving in a straight line, at a constant speed.If that didn't blow your mind, then please read it again. One of the things it tells usis that it doesn't take ANY FORCE to keep an object moving.
When the forces on an object are balanced, then they have the same effect on itas NO FORCE at all would have. That means that the object does not accelerate,and THAT means that it continues moving in a straight line, at a constant speed.If that didn't blow your mind, then please read it again. One of the things it tells usis that it doesn't take ANY FORCE to keep an object moving.
Ceres is a stable object. It is not going to blow up.
air, water etc. can move object. Example: A ping pong ball is on a table. Blow on the ball it moves.
As a noun, "blow" refers to the act of hitting something with force, or the influence of an unfortunate or damaging event. For example, "She delivered a powerful blow to her opponent" or "Losing his job was a heavy blow to his finances."
A hard blow with a flat object.
A blow with a blunt object to the face
As when you blow a candle the force of the air pressure take it away and the oxygen around us make a way for it to blow.
no they do not who ever says that is wrong they blow up when they stick an object or thing
To "blow" an object would include:a horna trumpetsaxophonebugleIn slang "blow" can refer to:"blow a kiss" - Making a kissing sound against your hand, then flattening your hand (palm up) with fingers pointing toward another person, and "blowing" the kiss to the person."Let's blow this place" (To leave or to go away with the implication that the place is boring, a drag, a waste of time - 1950s slang)oral sex on a man's penis (usually combined with the word job)"blow it" - By some slip of the tongue, lie, or unexpected or unfortunate event, you failed to get the outcome you were seeking. For example, Molly said, "I can't blow this test.""blow off" (or "blew off") - to fail to go, to appear, at a place you should have been but did not go. Example: John blew off the last day of school.blew or blow money - Example: I'm going to blow my paycheck to buy the stereo I want. Example: John blew his allowance on candy bars.I think "blow" also was used in reference to using illicit/illegal street drugs.
Gravity is an example of force that keeps use firmly on the Earth. An other example is a very strong wind that could blow a person off their feet.