Yes. Your heat is always in motion. Your lungs are always in motion. Your eyes are almost always in motion. Your brain is always thinking but i'm not sure if you consider that in motion. hope i helped.
True
True
yes, true.
This statement is true. This type of movement is called Uniform Circular Motion. For every circular motion at constant speed, there is a constant radial acceleration (always pointing towards the center of the circle) named centripetal acceleration. This constant acceleration ensures that at every moment during the motion the orientation of the velocity is changed so that the object stays in a circular path.
That sounds pretty much like Newton's first law of motion, sometimes calledthe "law of inertia", so I'm going to say "True and notfalse".
true
True
True. Motion is always observed relative to a frame of reference, which provides a fixed point against which motion is measured. This allows us to quantify and describe the motion of an object accurately.
Yes. It is true.
True. Motion is always measured in relationship to a point of reference. This point of reference can be stationary or moving itself, but it is essential for determining the position, speed, and direction of an object in motion.
True
Motion is the change in position of an object over time. It can be described in terms of speed, velocity, and acceleration. Motion is relative, meaning it is always described with respect to a reference point.
Your brain controls all of the parts of the body. This is especially true of the mouth.
No, if that were true you wouldn't grow. The bulk of it "passes", but a lot is used by the body.
Only penis
False. A contra example; Triton has a circular motion about Neptune Newton's first law of motion: a body remains a rest or in uniform motion in a straight line unless acted upon by a force. If there is a centripetal force towards a point acting on a body that is moving then that body will have circular motion. The body and point do not have to be on earth.
This is not true. Projectile motion consists of an object moving in a two-dimensional plane under the influence of gravity. While the vertical component of the motion may involve a downward movement, the horizontal component can be in any direction.