The force of friction, which is the normal force (weight) multiplied by the coefficient of friction (how rough the carpet is).
Friction Force
=That force is friction!=
Friction cause the ball to slow down
friction
Well, it depends on thedirection the ball is moving in, and the surface it is moving on/through. Commonly, it's Air Resistance that slows a moving ball in the air , when the ball is moving upwards through the air, Gravitational Force will slow it down. However, if the ball is moving downwards(towards the ground), there is practically no force acting on the ball to slow it down, so it will keep increasing speed until it bounces off the ground.When the ball moves across a surface (ex. wood, grass, tiles, carpet), it would take some amount of Friction to slow it down.
dsd
friction stops things from moving and slows it down
Friction :)
The limiting frictional force is the force that slows down the tennis ball on the roller coaster.
friction slows it down
friction is what slows everything down. if there was no gravity and you rolled a ball across the ground, then the ball would just keep rolling forever
When a ball is thrown into the air, it encounters drag. Drag is the opposing force acting in the opposite direction of the ball. Drag slows down the ball's speed.
friction
The contact force will keep the ball moving but as the ball goes farther the ball slows down that's were the non contact force comes in it makes the ball not in contact
Well, it depends on thedirection the ball is moving in, and the surface it is moving on/through. Commonly, it's Air Resistance that slows a moving ball in the air , when the ball is moving upwards through the air, Gravitational Force will slow it down. However, if the ball is moving downwards(towards the ground), there is practically no force acting on the ball to slow it down, so it will keep increasing speed until it bounces off the ground.When the ball moves across a surface (ex. wood, grass, tiles, carpet), it would take some amount of Friction to slow it down.
Friction
It will not, unless it is acted upon another force. If it's rolling on something, then friction will stop it (the ball rubbing on the table slows it down).
As the ball rises from point 1 to point 3 it slows down - This is True
A ball thrown down. The thrown ball will have a greater initial velocity and since they experience the same force of gravity, it will always be faster (until they both reach terminal velocity).
water resistance