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are they producers, decomposers, consumers, or abiotic factors
No, a horizontal force that is less than the weight of an object will not be able to move the object. In order to move the object, the horizontal force must be greater than or equal to the weight of the object.
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The direction of static friction acting on an object placed on a horizontal surface is opposite to the direction in which the object is trying to move.
In simple cases, you would put time on the horizontal axis.
Increasing the horizontal velocity to the maximum in a projectile motion will cause the object to travel further horizontally before hitting the ground. This is because the horizontal velocity determines how far the object will travel in the horizontal direction before gravity pulls it down. The vertical motion of the object will remain the same, but the increased horizontal velocity will result in a longer horizontal distance traveled.
You have not provided a sensible question, so it is not possible to provide a sensible answer. If the object is on a horizontal surface, or in free fall, the answer is no. If the object is on an inclined surface, the answer is yes. You can, for example, push a bicycle uphill. The force you exert is mainly horizontal, but the bike goes upwards.
horizontal
Time on horizontal, Distance on Vertical
Consumers.
The amount of horizontal force required to start in motion an object sitting on a horizontal surface must be greater than the force of static friction acting on the object. This is because the force of static friction opposes the applied force until the object starts moving.