Then the moon would fall on us and we would start eating spaghetti.
Reactive centrifugal force is not the same thing as centrifugal force. Reactive centrifugal force is the reaction force. It is the reaction force reacting to a centripetal force.
yes it is
Centrifugal force.
No. Centripetal force is a real force that pulls objects towards the center of the circular motion. Centrifugal force is a ficticious force that seems to pull an object towards the outside.
No, it isn't.
centrifugal force
Reactive centrifugal force is not the same thing as centrifugal force. Reactive centrifugal force is the reaction force. It is the reaction force reacting to a centripetal force.
An object rotating at a high speed or a heavier object rotating at a slower speed would produce the most centrifugal force. The centrifugal force depends on the mass of the object and the square of the rotational speed.
Centrifugal force is a measure of the opposite reaction of a centripetal force.
The centrifugal force is an apparent (ficticious) force, caused by a rotational movement. The amount of the apparent centrifugal force can be calculated by the same formula as the amount of the real centripetal force.
Centrifugal force is often confused with centripetal force.
Centrifugal force is used in a roller coaster.
Earth would drift toward the sun due to no centrifugal force being exerted anymore. We'd all burn.
Centrifugal force increases with increasing speed and radius of rotation. The faster an object moves in a circular path or the larger the radius of rotation, the stronger the centrifugal force acting on the object.
No, gravity is not an example of a centrifugal force. Gravity is the force of attraction between objects with mass, while centrifugal force is the outward force experienced in a rotating reference frame.
An object with a larger mass and rotating at a faster speed will produce the most centrifugal force. The force increases with both the mass of the object and the square of its velocity.
Centrifugal force can refer to two types: 1) Pseudo centrifugal force, which is the perceived force felt in a rotating reference frame due to inertia, and 2) Centrifugal force in mechanics, which is the outward force experienced by an object moving in a curved path.