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Newton's first law,'cause the toy on the floor does not move until the baby applies an external force of 5 Newtons on the toy.
A force of 4500 Newtons is required.
Obviously 20 N of force, right? Since neither object goes anywhere.
Because when the bat or your leg puts a force on the ball, the ball pushes back according to newtons second law. this therefore causes the ball to move forwards
Force is measured in Newtons (N) The amount of force required = the mass of the object x the acceleration
Newton's first law,'cause the toy on the floor does not move until the baby applies an external force of 5 Newtons on the toy.
A force of 4500 Newtons is required.
Nope - it's something else that gets the "equal & opposite". When you walk the force that pushes you forward pushes the ground backwards.
Obviously 20 N of force, right? Since neither object goes anywhere.
Because when the bat or your leg puts a force on the ball, the ball pushes back according to newtons second law. this therefore causes the ball to move forwards
it measures how much force is needed to to move it
newtons 2nd law states that if a force is put on an object then the object will move in the oppisite direction of the force no thats the third law
'Thrust' pushes against it from the rear, and 'drag' pushes against it from the front.
it is zero
The push or pull exerted on one object by another is simply a force and this is measured in Newtons. Using Newtons second law: Force = mass * acceleration, we can see that one Newton is the force required to move a one kilogram mass at a rate of one meter per second squared.
not unless an outside force is acted upon it. newtons laws.
newtons third law of motion