The force of gravity acts in the opposite direction of the object's movement, pulling it back towards the center of the planet.
The direction of the force acting on an object moving radially inward towards the center of a circular path is towards the center of the circle.
True. In uniform circular motion, the particle's velocity is tangential to the circular path, and the acceleration is directed radially inward, towards the center of the circular path. This centripetal acceleration causes the change in direction of the particle's velocity, but the magnitude of the velocity remains constant.
The force of gravity acts towards the center of mass of the object in question.
The electric field of a uniformly charged sphere is the same as that of a point charge located at the center of the sphere. This means that the electric field is radially outward from the center of the sphere and its magnitude decreases as you move away from the center.
radially inward
No, a continental glacier generally flows radially outward from its center due to the force of gravity. However, the flow direction can be influenced by factors such as topography and subglacial geology.
The direction of the force acting on an object moving radially inward towards the center of a circular path is towards the center of the circle.
To escape the gravitation pull of an object you must travel at or in excess of the escape velocity. The direction of the escape velocity is always radially outward from the center of the object.
True. In uniform circular motion, the particle's velocity is tangential to the circular path, and the acceleration is directed radially inward, towards the center of the circular path. This centripetal acceleration causes the change in direction of the particle's velocity, but the magnitude of the velocity remains constant.
The force of gravity acts towards the center of mass of the object in question.
The electric field of a uniformly charged sphere is the same as that of a point charge located at the center of the sphere. This means that the electric field is radially outward from the center of the sphere and its magnitude decreases as you move away from the center.
The Earth's gravity pulls the Moon towards it and its center.
The gravity of the Sun is balanced by the outward pressure from nuclear fusion occurring in its core. This pressure pushes outward, counteracting the force of gravity pulling everything towards the Sun's center, maintaining the Sun's stable size and shape.
radially inward
Gravity acts as though you were being pulled to the center (of the earth, in my case).
It's toward the center of the Earth. We call that direction "down".
The properties of electric fields within a spherical volume of space include the field being radially outward from the center of the sphere, decreasing in strength as the distance from the center increases, and being uniform at any given distance from the center.