Not always, the unbalanced force only points in the direction of the acceleration so a body may be moving in the opposite direction.
Example.
A car moves with some speed to the right on a horizontal surface and lock the brakes, if the surface has friction, but the net force acting on it is equal to the frictional force pointing left and produces a Deceleration of carriage until stop, but while this happens continuously in motion to the right.
The force of friction is exerted in the direction opposite the direction of motion, between two surfaces that are in contact with each other. It acts to hinder motion and opposes the relative motion between the surfaces.
No, acceleration is change in velocity. (And velocity is speed in a certain direction.) If an object slows down, then it is changing velocity and thus accelerating. (In this case, the acceleration is negative.) If an object changes direction, then it's velocity changes, so this is also acceleration. (This is centripetal acceleration.)
Newton's third law states that for every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction. It is applicable whenever a force is exerted on a body, resulting in a reaction force of equal magnitude but in the opposite direction on another body. This law is always in effect when there are interactions between two objects.
The amount and direction of movement of water in plants can be predicted by measuring water potential, which is the tendency of water to move from one area to another. Water always moves from an area of higher water potential to an area of lower water potential.
Unbalanced forces causes object's position to change, in which is known as acceleration. According to Newton's first law, an object will always be in the same position regardless if it is moving or not, unless an unbalanced force happens on it.
Not always. An unbalanced force will accelerate an object in the direction of the force. If the object is already in motion, the unbalanced force can either speed up, slow down, or change the direction of the motion. If the force is not enough to overcome other resistive forces, the object may not move.
Yes. If there is an unbalanced force on an object, the object will always accelerate in the direction of the force.
Buoyant force.
Yes, an unbalanced force can change an object's motion by causing it to accelerate in the direction of the force. This could involve speeding up, slowing down, changing direction, or a combination of these movements depending on the force's magnitude and direction.
The force of friction is exerted in the direction opposite the direction of motion, between two surfaces that are in contact with each other. It acts to hinder motion and opposes the relative motion between the surfaces.
Weight acts in the direction of the gravitational force exerted on an object, which is always directed towards the center of the Earth.
The normal force, exerted by a surface in contact with an object, always acts perpendicular to the surface and in the direction opposite to gravity to keep the object from falling through the surface.
When the forces are balanced, there is no acceleration (Ex: Anything stationary or anything with uniform motion). Unbalanced forces ALWAYS cause acceleration.
No this causes an unbalanced force or a balanced forceNO chizz you rape the poor person!
No, upthrust is not a scalar quantity. It is a vector quantity as it has both magnitude and direction. Upthrust is the upward force exerted by a fluid on an object immersed in it, and its direction is always opposite to the direction of gravity.
There's no such thing as "an unbalanced force". But when the entire group of forceson an object is unbalanced, then the object must accelerate.
He was always a bit strange and many said he was unbalanced. There was no way it would stand for long as looking at it you could clearly see that it was unbalanced.