A question of Philosophy.
Well, all electrons would be indistinguishable from each other.
And 100ml of distilled de-ionized water would be indistinguishable from another.
But in neither case would both items be able to occupy the same space.
So if you include the space/time dimensions and the energy mode of the items, then these are part of the description of the particular object, and no two will be the same.
When the group of all forces acting on an object is balanced, then its effect on the object's motion is exactly the same as if there were no force at all. In that situation, the object continues with constant velocity, also called 'constant uniform motion'. It moves in a straight line, at a speed that doesn't change.
No, but if you're looking for a "young Candy", catch Andrew Caldwell in "College". They look exactly the same and have the same comedic tendencies.
Exactly the same: Madagascar.
It is exactly the same as momentum and covered by Newton's first law of motion. Inertia is a way of expressing the force required to get an object to move from rest, or the force required to change the velocity or direction of an object in motion. Anything that has mass will have inertia - a "resistance to move or change velocity or direction of motion".
Nat Turner Have Any Siblings ?
No. It will be exactly the same, in every detail, as if you had paid cash for it.
When one object is exactly like another, it means they are identical in all aspects and characteristics. This could include having the same size, shape, color, and any other defining features.
They are exactly the same amount
A circle/sphere, a square/cube
When you are moving with the same speed as the object and in the same direction.
If the object is on or near the Earth's surface, then most people call that force the object's "weight". Nobody ever gives any attention to the gravitational force that the object exerts on the Earth, probably because it happens to be exactly the same as the object's weight on the Earth. The neat thing about it, however, is that the same force is also the Earth's weight on the object.
An exact replica is a model that looks exactly the same as the original object.
no
No two tigers have exactly the same striped pattern.
If it did, then any rolling object would speed up because of friction. Since everythingthat rolls actually slows down, the virtual 'force' of friction must be exactly oppositethe direction of an object's motion.
Not exactly. Asteroids and meteoroids fall into the same category of object, the only difference being that asteroids are larger.
Exactly the same. Mass is the same everywhere. The weight will be 1/6 less on the moon though.