G-Force
fairly straightforward. All bodies will remain in their steady state unless acted on by an outside force. A car will not move unless the engine drives it (or gravity takes it down hill) A car will not stop unless you apply the brakes (or hit a wall) So, a moving thing will keep moving and a stopped thing will stay stopped. When you are sitting in a stationary car you are also stationary (obvious) the acceleration is applied to the car and transmitted to you through the seat. As your body is hinged at the middle your bum goes forward with the seat, but your upper body is following the 'steady state' rule and does not begin to move forward until it comes into contact with the back of the seat. The seat is moving forward and you are not (for a short time) Therefore you feel pressed into the seat It is actually the seat that is pushing you.
When a car accelerates, it pushes you back due to inertia. Inertia is the tendency of an object to resist changes in its motion, so as the car speeds up, your body wants to stay at rest causing you to move backward in relation to the direction of acceleration.
When a car accelerates, you may feel a sense of being pressed back into your seat due to inertia. You may also experience a feeling of increasing speed and excitement as the car gains momentum. Additionally, the engine noise may become louder as the revs go up.
your resistance to a change in motion or inertia does this. Your body is still at rest once the car is accelerating foreward. The same happens when the car stops suddenly. You keep moving foreward because of inertia.Principles of Newtons Laws of motionAn object at rest tends to stay at rest and an object in motion tends to stay in motion unless acted upon by an outside force.Your body is at rest at a stoplight. When the car you are in accelerates an outside force (the car) is acting on your body accelerating your body along with it. Your body resists this acceleration because of its tendency to stay at rest. The resistance is felt as pressure against the seat of your car.
When a bus starts suddenly, the passengers tend to be pushed backward due to their inertia. As the bus accelerates forward, the passengers’ bodies want to stay at rest, causing them to experience a sensation of being pushed back into their seats until their bodies catch up with the bus's motion.
Inertia explains the feeling of getting pushed back in your car seat as the car begins to accelerate because as the car accelerates your body want to resist the forward motion the car is 'pulling' you in. Inertia is the tendency of an object to resist motion
Inertia explains the feeling of getting pushed back in your car seat as the car begins to accelerate because as the car accelerates your body want to resist the forward motion the car is 'pulling' you in. Inertia is the tendency of an object to resist motion.
fairly straightforward. All bodies will remain in their steady state unless acted on by an outside force. A car will not move unless the engine drives it (or gravity takes it down hill) A car will not stop unless you apply the brakes (or hit a wall) So, a moving thing will keep moving and a stopped thing will stay stopped. When you are sitting in a stationary car you are also stationary (obvious) the acceleration is applied to the car and transmitted to you through the seat. As your body is hinged at the middle your bum goes forward with the seat, but your upper body is following the 'steady state' rule and does not begin to move forward until it comes into contact with the back of the seat. The seat is moving forward and you are not (for a short time) Therefore you feel pressed into the seat It is actually the seat that is pushing you.
When a car accelerates, it pushes you back due to inertia. Inertia is the tendency of an object to resist changes in its motion, so as the car speeds up, your body wants to stay at rest causing you to move backward in relation to the direction of acceleration.
When a car accelerates, you may feel a sense of being pressed back into your seat due to inertia. You may also experience a feeling of increasing speed and excitement as the car gains momentum. Additionally, the engine noise may become louder as the revs go up.
your resistance to a change in motion or inertia does this. Your body is still at rest once the car is accelerating foreward. The same happens when the car stops suddenly. You keep moving foreward because of inertia.Principles of Newtons Laws of motionAn object at rest tends to stay at rest and an object in motion tends to stay in motion unless acted upon by an outside force.Your body is at rest at a stoplight. When the car you are in accelerates an outside force (the car) is acting on your body accelerating your body along with it. Your body resists this acceleration because of its tendency to stay at rest. The resistance is felt as pressure against the seat of your car.
When a bus starts suddenly, the passengers tend to be pushed backward due to their inertia. As the bus accelerates forward, the passengers’ bodies want to stay at rest, causing them to experience a sensation of being pushed back into their seats until their bodies catch up with the bus's motion.
The back keeps on going even though the front has stopped.
Passengers on a bus tend to fall backward when it starts suddenly due to inertia. As the bus accelerates forward, the passengers, who were initially at rest, want to stay at rest due to their inertia. This causes them to lean back or fall backward as the bus moves forward.
Inertia. You want to go straight, the car (door) [you should be wearing seat belt] is forcing you to curve.
inertia
yes they can because they stop inertia from bringing you back or foward