A stimulant typically speeds you up by increasing alertness, energy, and cognitive functions. It can make you feel more awake and focused, leading to improvements in attention and productivity.
Making an object speed up or slow down always requires a force.-- To make the object speed up, apply a force to it in the same directionthat it's moving.-- To make it slow down, apply a force to it in the opposite direction.
The sympathetic nerves speed up the heart rate, while the parasympathetic nerves slow it down.
That could be one description of "force" or "net force."Notice that it can also change the direction in which an object is moving,without changing its speed at all.
Things that can speed up cell division include growth factors, hormones, and certain mutations. On the other hand, factors that can slow down cell division include DNA damage, nutrient deprivation, and cell cycle checkpoints.
When you deploy your parachute, you do not go up; you simply slow down due to air resistance and drag. The parachute increases your air resistance by capturing air in its canopy, which slows your descent speed until you reach a safe landing speed.
I think you mean slow down and speed up. slow down =slow, speed up=fast
the main effect of a stimulant is speeding up in the nervous system. (the opposite of a depressant is a stimulant) deprassants slow down the nervous system
slow down
speed you up
Speed up
Nothing happens to the forces. The forces are what makes the thing speed up or slow down.
slow up
Slow Down Speed Up - 1967 TV was released on: USA: 1 June 1967
It slows down.
Speed UP
Slow it down or speed it up
It's not that simple, and is equivalent to asking if cars speed up or slow down at the bottom of a hill: it depends on which direction they're going.