Circular motion would change the direction of an object but would not affect the object's speed.
If there is zero net force on an object, the object will not accelerate. (It's velocity will not change.)
If the force is acting in the opposite direction to the movement, the object will slow down and then accelerate in the direction of the force. Negative for
If an object's velocity changes -- if its speed increases or decreases or if its direction changes -- that means it has accelerated. For an object to accelerate, the sum of the forces acting upon it must be non-zero. So, in other words, forcechanges an object's velocity.
Then the objects will move in the direction of the resultant force.
The motion of an object will change when it is acted on by some force. This force will speed it up, slow it down, change its direction of motion or perhaps cause it to spin. All thses changes of motion are response to the force acting on the object. This is Newton's first law: An object in motion will continue in motion (and in the same direction) unless acted on by some force. Some might call this the law of inertia.
Any object that has a mass.
Velocity is a change in an object's motion OR direction of motion.
Direction or shape
An unbalanced force can: change the speed an object moves at change the direction an object is moving cause an object to start/stop moving
I think this question is not phrased very well. Any force can change objects velocity (speed+direction). If fact that is the definition of the force - F=ma any force, by definition itself, can change objects velocity. Maybe you meant what force can change objects direction of motion? In that case - any force that has a different direction (not the same as direction of motion) Any force can change an object's motion.
Motion is the change in an object's position without including direction.
If I am reading your question correctly, you want to now if balanced forces can change the direction an object is traveling. The answer is no. Balanced forces always produce no net change, hence the term "balanced". You need an unbalanced force to change the direction of an object, or to set an object in motion from a standstill.
the spectrum change with direction, either from you or away
Forces that are equal in magnitude, opposite in direction and acting on the same object will not create a change in said objects motion.
Motion is the change in an object's position without including direction.
Mass is the amount of material in an object. The more material in an object, the more material you have to get moving before the object itself moves. Have a friend pitch you one baseball. You will notice the recoil of the bat. Ducktape 2 or 3 baseballs togeter and have your friend pitch them to you. The recoil will increase significantly because you have to change the direction of more objects. The more objects, the more mass.
When the forces on an object are unbalanced, the object undergoes acceleration. Its direction is the direction of the net effective force, and its magnitude is the magnitude of the net effective force divided by the object's mass.