* Force at the wheels (acceleration, braking, turning, maintaining constant velocity, normal force) * Drag from air movement * Gravity
When a car is moving in the forward direction, the main forces at play are the engine force propelling the car forward, the frictional force between the tires and the road providing traction, and air resistance acting against the car's motion. These forces work together to keep the car moving in the desired direction.
Yes, if a car is moving at a constant velocity, all the forces acting on it are balanced. The forward force of the engine and the opposing forces such as air resistance and friction are all equal, resulting in a net force of zero and the car moving at a constant speed.
Yes, frictional forces such as air, tires against the ground, gravity pulling the car down, force of engine moving car forward. The positive force of the engine turning the drive train and the wheels is equaled by the frictional forces; so overall forces balance out.
Matched forces acting on a moving car will not cause it to go faster. The speed of a car is primarily determined by the balance between the engine's power and the forces of friction and air resistance. Matching forces will only help maintain the car's current speed or slow it down, depending on the direction and magnitude of the forces.
If a car is moving at a constant speed, it is in a state of balanced forces. The forces acting on the car are equal in magnitude and opposite in direction, resulting in no change in its speed or direction.
When a car is moving in the forward direction, the main forces at play are the engine force propelling the car forward, the frictional force between the tires and the road providing traction, and air resistance acting against the car's motion. These forces work together to keep the car moving in the desired direction.
Yes, if a car is moving at a constant velocity, all the forces acting on it are balanced. The forward force of the engine and the opposing forces such as air resistance and friction are all equal, resulting in a net force of zero and the car moving at a constant speed.
Yes, frictional forces such as air, tires against the ground, gravity pulling the car down, force of engine moving car forward. The positive force of the engine turning the drive train and the wheels is equaled by the frictional forces; so overall forces balance out.
Matched forces acting on a moving car will not cause it to go faster. The speed of a car is primarily determined by the balance between the engine's power and the forces of friction and air resistance. Matching forces will only help maintain the car's current speed or slow it down, depending on the direction and magnitude of the forces.
If a car is moving at a constant speed, it is in a state of balanced forces. The forces acting on the car are equal in magnitude and opposite in direction, resulting in no change in its speed or direction.
When a car is not moving, the main forces acting on it are gravity pulling it downward and the normal force from the ground pushing upward to support the car's weight. There may also be frictional forces between the tires and the road, as well as air resistance acting on the car.
When unbalanced forces act on a moving car, it can accelerate, decelerate, or change direction. The net force determines the acceleration or deceleration of the car, causing it to speed up, slow down, or turn.
Yes...gravity
actting
No, that's not the way our Universe works. I suggest do some reading on Newton's Second Law - for instance, in the Wikipedia. Briefly, you do NOT need a NET force to keep an object moving. With a net force of zero (i.e., balanced forces): * A stationary object will remain stationary * A moving object will continue moving, at constant velocity.
No,because if the car is moving at a constant velocity that means the acceleration is zero. So the net force is zero and there may be some forces acting on it. Only gravity, downward.
car wheel moving until the breaks not applied