Coplanar just means that all forces act within a single plane, rather than in three dimensions. Examples aren't really necessary -- it's really a mathematical abstraction, because in the real world forces act in three dimensions.
Forces in chemistry are electrical forces.
opposing forces push with equal strength
internal forces that originate in the earth's interior
There are four fundamental forces in nature, the strong, electromagnetic, the weak and gravitational. All forces between particles can be traced back to these.
Disperson forces only because it is not a polar compound.
¢The forces, which meet at one point, but their lines of action do not lie on the same plane, are known as non-coplanar concurrent forces.
Coplanar forces are a set of forces all of which act in the same plane. Non-coplanar forces are a set of forces in which at least one act in a direction incline to the plane formed by two of the forces.
Coplanar forces systems have all the forces acting in one plane. It also means that all forces act within a single plane instead of three dimensions.
equilbrium in coplaner forces at rigid body.
Coplanar or not, the two conditions for equilibrium are:The sum of all forces must be zeroThe sum of all torques must be zero.
non-coplanar is forces that not in same plain.
Forces that cancel each other out are coplanar, all reside in the same plane.
ABCD is a squre. forces of magnitudes 1,2,3,P, and Q units act along AB, BC, CD, DA and AC respectively. find the value of P and Q so that the resultant of five forces is a couple
In equilibrium, the sum of total vertical, total horizontal forces = 0, and movement of the body = 0.
if the line of action of forces are in different plain is callled non-coplaner force
When all the forces of a force system act in one plane it is called coplanar force system. If the forces act in more than one plane then it is forces in space. In this case forces are not contained in one plane. When all the forces of a system pass through a common point they are called concurrent forces. Thus we have concurrent coplanar forces when all forces are in one plane and pass through a common point. Also when forces in space pass through a common point we have concurrent forces in space.
These are forces which act in the same plane (coplanar, not coplanner!) and that their lines of action all meet at a single point.