Inertia
Tangential velocity squared is GMs/r and velocity v =29814m/s and the centripetal acceleration is v2/r= 5.928 E-3 m/s2
It's Newton's first law of motion: "An oject in motion will stay in motion (with the same velocity) until an outside force acts upon it and an object at rest will stay at rest until an outside force acts upon it."
The amount of momentum that an object has is dependent upon two variables: how much stuff is moving and how fast the stuff is moving. Momentum depends upon the variables mass and velocity. In terms of an equation, the momentum of an object is equal to the mass of the object times the velocity of the object.
"Balanced forces" doesn't mean that an object doesn't move. "Balanced forces" means that the vector sum of forces on an object is zero. Now, according to Newton's First Law, if no force is acting on an object, if that object is at rest it will continue being at rest; if it is moving, it will continue moving with the same velocity. In other words, there will be no CHANGE in velocity; that doesn't mean that the velocity must necessarily be zero.
The red shift shows the velocity with which an object is moving away from the earth. The red shift of an object is correlated to its distance from the earth and so it is also a measure of the distance.
That things tend to stay in motion.
Yes...gravity
There need not be any wavelength if the body is moving laterally and continues to do so.
Nothing changes. When no force acts on an object moving with constant velocity, the body continues its motion with uniform velocity, or if the object is at rest, it will remain at rest.
No; acceleration means the velocity changes.No; acceleration means the velocity changes.No; acceleration means the velocity changes.No; acceleration means the velocity changes.
No, it isn't possible. Velocity specifies both speed and direction; if velocity doesn't change, that means that neither the speed nor the direction change.
If an object is moving away from you and there are no forces acting on it,then it continues moving in a straight line at constant speed.
No. You can't tell the difference, for one reason: There IS no difference.
since accelaration is the change in velocity of an object per unit time......if velocity is zero then there is no acceleration.its nt possible
No acceleration occurs - if stationary, it does not move, if moving, it continues its original velocity (speed *and* direction).
No, because acceleration is the rate of change of velocity.
No; acceleration means the velocity changes.No; acceleration means the velocity changes.No; acceleration means the velocity changes.No; acceleration means the velocity changes.