Movement Occurs When an Object moves Relative to a Stationary Object
All motion is relative. The question "is this object moving?" is in fact meaningless unless we specify "moving relative to what other object". Similarly, there is no such thing as "absolute rest": it's just as true to say that the road is moving at 50 km/h relative to your car as it is to say that your car is moving at 50 km/h relative to the road.
it depends on the reference points, that is form where the object is viewed...when sun is viewed form earth, it moving...but earth is also moving...when the rotation of the earth is stopped, then the sun is at a constant position...thereforean object position relative to another object is changingonly when the reference point changes..
When a moving object is pushed in the direction of its motion the speed of the object increases
Bulk motion is a type of motion that an object does. The object moves in a wave-like formation instead of just the waves moving.
It is moving either one way or the other. Linear motion is straight line motion. Either the object is moving toward point A or away from it toward point B.
An object is in motion if it changes position relative to a reference point. Motion is a relative quantity and is expressed in respect to the position of another object. Example: both a car and the Earth are moving (earth is revolving around the sun) but if we express the motion of the car in respect to the Earth, we say the car is moving relative to the Earth. At the same time the earth is moving relative to the sun.
Relative to any chosen reference point.
Relative motion is the concept that the motion of all objects is relative to other objects. If you are sitting still right now you are not moving relative to the earth, however you are moving relative to sun.
When an object's distance from another object is changing, it is in motion. The change in distance indicates that the object is moving relative to the other object.
There is no singular motion because everything is made up of subatomic structures going many directions and so therefore any object's motion is always going to be relative motion in it's consideration.
Motion is considered relative because how an object appears to be moving depends on the observer's frame of reference. Two observers moving at different speeds relative to each other will perceive the motion of an object differently. This concept is a fundamental principle of Einstein's theory of relativity.
Motion must be measured relative to a frame of reference, which is a set of coordinates that are used to determine the position of an object in space. This can be a stationary object, another moving object, or an observer. The motion of an object is described in terms of its change in position relative to the chosen frame of reference.
You can tell if another object is moving while you are also moving by observing changes in the position of the object relative to you over time. If the object's position changes relative to your position, it is likely moving, even if you are also in motion. Additionally, you can use external reference points or landmarks to determine if both you and the object are in motion.
motion
Think of two cars driving down a highway in the same direction. One is going 30m/s, and one is going 50m/s. The faster car is going 20m/s relative to the slower car.We can basically think of relative motion as motion of one object compared to that of another object.
Motion is relative. That's because you can't define motion because it's relative to the observer's point of view. :D Oh & you have to have a reference frame b/c you can't answer, "are you moving?" It has to be "are you moving compared to ______."
The object is in motion relative to the reference point.