5N.
The book remains on the table due to gravity and the normal force exerted by the table upward, balancing the downward force of gravity acting on the book. As long as these forces are balanced, the book will remain at rest on the table.
There is a 2N force in the upwafd direction, this force will cause the book to accelerate in the upward direction at a rate of a=2/mass of book = 2x9.8/10 = 1.96 m/s^2.
The book remains stationary on the table due to the force of gravity pulling it downwards, which is balanced by the normal force exerted by the table in the upward direction. As long as these two forces are balanced, the book will stay in place.
Yes, the force that supports the weight of an object placed on a surface at rest, such as a book on a tabletop, is called the normal force. It acts perpendicular to the surface and counteracts the force of gravity to keep the object in equilibrium.
The action is the Earth's gravity pulling down on the book. The reaction is the book exerting an equal and opposite force upwards on the Earth, though it is so small that it is essentially negligible.
Because the table is exerting an upward force on the book exactly equal and opposite to the force of gravity.
The book remains on the table due to gravity and the normal force exerted by the table upward, balancing the downward force of gravity acting on the book. As long as these forces are balanced, the book will remain at rest on the table.
There is a 2N force in the upwafd direction, this force will cause the book to accelerate in the upward direction at a rate of a=2/mass of book = 2x9.8/10 = 1.96 m/s^2.
The book remains stationary on the table due to the force of gravity pulling it downwards, which is balanced by the normal force exerted by the table in the upward direction. As long as these two forces are balanced, the book will stay in place.
Yes, the force that supports the weight of an object placed on a surface at rest, such as a book on a tabletop, is called the normal force. It acts perpendicular to the surface and counteracts the force of gravity to keep the object in equilibrium.
yes it can. the reason why is the force the wheels are exerting is pushing them foeward. ok that sucked look read a book dont check internet
A kilogram.A kilogram.A kilogram.A kilogram.
It depends. Two surfaces which are pressed together will show a frictional force resisting any sliding. If they are pressed together by gravity (e.g. such as for a book lying on a table), then the frictional force resisting a horizontal push will depend on the weight of the book, which depends on the force of gravity.
Gravitational force (weight), pointing down.Reaction force, equal to the gravitational force (weight), exerted by the tabletop, pointing up.
Yes
The action is the Earth's gravity pulling down on the book. The reaction is the book exerting an equal and opposite force upwards on the Earth, though it is so small that it is essentially negligible.
Three examples of action-reaction force pairs are: A person pushing against a wall (action) and the wall pushing back on the person (reaction). A rocket pushing exhaust gases downward (action) and the rocket being propelled upward (reaction). A book resting on a table (action) and the table exerting an upward force on the book (reaction).