In classical mechanics, there are no violations that are known. however there are several violations in quantum mechanics.
Newton's First Law is that an object at rest tends to stay at rest (inertia) and an object in motion tends to stay in motion, unless acted on by an outside force. So perpetual motion in theory is not a violation, unless an attempt is made to remove energy from the system. What might seem a violation would be a spontaneous onset of motion without any causative force - this would suggest that there was indeed some force, just not one that was obvious or detectable.
Some possible questions related to the laws of motion include: What are Newton's three laws of motion? How do forces affect the motion of an object? How can we apply Newton's laws to analyze real-world situations?
Newton's first law. There was no frictional force to provide an unbalanced force that would allow the car to change its motion.
An object in motion will not change its motion unless acted on by an external force. This applies to zero motion also.
The force the other team will have to overcome to win is the sum of the forces exerted by you and your friend, which is 3 newtons + 8 newtons = 11 newtons. So, the other team will have to exert a force greater than 11 newtons to win the tug of war.
Not really. Newtons laws basically are: 1. an object at rest will stay at rest and an object in motion will stay in motion unless acted upon by a force 2. force equals mass times acceleration 3. every reaction has an equal and opposite reaction Roller coasters are, however, a good example of conservation of energy.
A violation of Newton's 1st law of motion would be any situation where an object does not remain at rest or in uniform motion unless acted upon by an external force. This could occur if an object started moving without any force acting on it, or if an object kept moving without any external force to sustain its motion.
Newtons law of motion is, An object in motion will stay in motion unless acted upon by an outside force.There are several laws but this is the first and easiest. As far as the speeding bit,I am not entirely sure what that means.Maybe your grammar is bad,or you are not cognizant of the question you pose.A better question would be simply" What is Newtons law of motion"
that movie leathal weapon
Some possible questions related to the laws of motion include: What are Newton's three laws of motion? How do forces affect the motion of an object? How can we apply Newton's laws to analyze real-world situations?
It would be better to use newtons second law to explain this but okay. well newtons 1st law states that an object in motion will stay in motion unless stopped by a force. So, if your in the car going 40 miles an hour and you suddenly stop the car without slowing down, the car stops but you don't and you would keep going in the same speed and direction without the airbags there or a seatbelt you would fly right through the windshield so the airbag protects you from the objects you would slam into in a car crash.
If an umpire calls "first violation" it means there was more than one violation that a team made. If a player first contacts another player then bats the ball out, the first violation would be contact because that is the first rule that was broken.
Newtons first Law
To push a force of 100 Newtons back, you would need to exert an equal force of 100 Newtons in the opposite direction. This is in accordance with Newton's Third Law of motion, which states that for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction.
Newton's first law. There was no frictional force to provide an unbalanced force that would allow the car to change its motion.
It would be 20*4.4 newtons = 88 newtons.
That is true. According to Newton's first law of motion: "An object at rest tends to stay at rest, of if it is in motion tends to stay in motion with the same speed and in the same direction unless acted upon by a sum of physical forces." So if I'm pushing in one direction with 5 Newtons of force, and you are pushing in the opposite direction with 3 Newtons of force, the object will begin to accelerate towards you. This is also assuming that we either void the static friction, or we are on a frictionless surface.
An object in motion will not change its motion unless acted on by an external force. This applies to zero motion also.