When you throw a ball, it accelerates from your hand and moves through the air in a parabolic trajectory. The two main forces acting on the ball are gravity, which pulls it downward, and air resistance, which opposes its motion through the air. Gravity causes the ball to eventually fall back to the ground, while air resistance slows it down as it travels. Together, these forces influence the ball's flight path and speed.
The force that acts on a bowling ball is gravity pulling it downward towards the center of the Earth. Additionally, when the ball is thrown or rolled, external forces such as friction and air resistance will also act on it.
The two forces are of the same magnitude, act in opposite directions, and act on different objects.
London dispersion forces
Yes its a defensive and territorial act
Strong nuclear forces act through gluons in the nucleus
When you throw a ball, two main forces act on it: the force of the throw propelling it forward, and the force of gravity pulling it downward. The throw provides the initial thrust while gravity causes the ball to follow a curved path back to the ground.
Kinetic energy, momentum, gravity.
The force that acts on a ball when in the air is gravity.
When two forces act on a rubber ball, they can change its shape and size. The forces can compress or stretch the ball, affecting its elasticity and rebound characteristics. Additionally, the forces can also cause the ball to accelerate or decelerate depending on their direction and magnitude.
i think its compression and ... sorry i don't know the other one
The resistance the ground has on the ball causes it to slow down and this force is called friction. Ice has little friction which is why the ball would have rolled further on ice for instance.
When a ball is dropped, the main forces acting on it are gravity and air resistance. Gravity pulls the ball downwards towards the Earth, while air resistance pushes against the ball as it falls, causing drag. These forces determine the speed and trajectory of the ball as it descends.
The force's don't cancel out each other, they act on different objects. Forces can cancel only if they act on the same object.
As long as you can keep your feet on the ground, there should be no difference. Since the forces of gravity act vertically, they have no effect on things you're trying to do horizontally.
When a tennis ball rolls on grass, three main forces act on it: gravitational force pulling it downward, normal force exerted by the grass to support the ball's weight, and rolling resistance caused by friction between the ball and the grass.
The main forces acting on a ball sinking in water are gravity, buoyancy, and drag. Gravity pulls the ball downward, buoyancy pushes the ball upward due to water displacement, and drag resists the ball's motion through the water, slowing it down.
the forces cancel each other out Huh? The forces simply add. F1x + F2x = F3x