Accelerate, assuming that there is a net force acting upon the object. This means that the force you exert upon an object is not matched by any other force(s) in the opposite direction. Say you push on a wall. The wall will not accelerate because it will push back on you with the same force(Newton's Third Law). So the wall won't go anywhere, because there is zero net force in that system. But if we have a book on a tabletop, it will accelerate, if you can exceed the frictional force. Since the fricitonal force is constant in motion, you can produce a net force on the object, thus causing it to accelerate.
Not necessarily. Motion depends on the VELOCITY of the particle. What can only be said is that the object will ACCELERATE in the same direction as the unbalanced force (provided it is the only unbalanced force acting on the body)
When a vector force moves a displacement in the same direction, the product is negative and should be called "exergy" meaning energy out like exercise.
When you lift an object against gravity, then you are putting energy into the object and this is called energy. When you drop the object, exergy comes out as the object falls in the direction of the gravitational force.
Unfortunately, physicists have this situation backwards and have created a defective math, Vector Analysis, where I2=J2=K2 = + 1, when the proper mathematics Quaternions has the correct rules I2=J2=K2= -1.
Quaternions vector are Aassociative (II)J= I(IJ) =-K; the othere vectors are not, (II)J=+J but I(IJ)=IK= -J.
This is the difference of an explosion or implosion, or a rocket going up or down, depending on how you group the terms.
If there is no other force acting on the object, this should experimetanl an acceleration that is proportional to the magnitude of the resultant force of both and inversely proportional to the mass of the same, all this indicates the second law of newton
a = F / m
where:
F: F1+ F2 magnitude of the forces applied
m: mass of the body
Yes. An object accelerates in the direction of the net applied force, which is the vector sum of all applied forces.
All objects accelerate in the direction of the net force. No object will accelerate at all without a net force.
A force that causes an object to move is a kinetic force.
The object will move in the direction of the forces.
In that case, the combined force will act on the object.
Add the resultant vectors 4 + 10 (and as they are in the same direction there will be no sine or cosine factors to worry about).Answer: 14N in the direction of the forces
If an object is increasing in speed, the acceleration is positive and the force is in the direction of travel. If the object is slowing down, the acceleration is negative and the force is acting against the direction of movement.
If you apply force in the same direction an object moves, the work on the object is positive.If the force is in the opposite direction as the direction the object moves, the work on the object is negative.
If he object moves as a force is applied and the direction of the objects motion is the same as the direction of the same force.
in the same direction as the object's motion.
An object acted on by a force will accelerate in the direction of the force. Be careful, though, as this doesn't mean it will actually MOVE in the direction of the force. It may just slow down, etc.
1. A still object will remain still until acted upon by an outside force. A moving object will remain moving in the same direction with the same speed until acted upon by an outside force. 2. An object will move in the same direction as the force it was acted on by and will not stop even if the force stops 3. All actions have an equal and opposite reaction. Hopefully this helped
Add the resultant vectors 4 + 10 (and as they are in the same direction there will be no sine or cosine factors to worry about).Answer: 14N in the direction of the forces
The law states "An object at rest will remain at rest unless acted on by an unbalanced force. An object in motion continues in motion with the same speed and in the same direction unless acted upon by an unbalanced force."
The law states "An object at rest will remain at rest unless acted on by an unbalanced force. An object in motion continues in motion with the same speed and in the same direction unless acted upon by an unbalanced force."
The force of friction ALWAYS acts in the direction exactly opposite to the directionin which the object is moving.If the friction force acted in the same direction as the object's motion, then youwould want to have as much friction as possible, because that would help youmove the object with less fuel.
The law states "An object at rest will remain at rest unless acted on by an unbalanced force. An object in motion continues in motion with the same speed and in the same direction unless acted upon by an unbalanced force."
The law states "An object at rest will remain at rest unless acted on by an unbalanced force. An object in motion continues in motion with the same speed and in the same direction unless acted upon by an unbalanced force."
An object that stays at rest, stays at rest and an object in motion stays in motion with the same speed and in the same direction, unless acted upon by an unbalanced force
Because Newton's 1st law of motion is... An object at rest will stay at rest unless acted on by an ublanced force. An object in motion will stay in motion and the same direction unless acted on by an ublanced 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.
it moves ----------> there for if you were to push the object it will go <--------