There's no such thing as "a balanced force".
A GROUP of two or more forces is balanced if the
vector sum of all the forces in the group is zero.
When the thrust force is equal to the drag force, the object will maintain a constant velocity (assuming no other forces are acting on it). This state is known as dynamic equilibrium, where the forces are balanced and there is no acceleration.
In a parachute system, the balanced force is the air resistance (drag) acting against the force of gravity. The drag force slows down the descent of the parachute, creating a balanced force that allows it to glide safely to the ground. An unbalanced force would occur if the parachute experiences a sudden shift in wind direction or if there is a malfunction with the parachute system, causing it to descend faster or slower than intended.
No. This is because the object is speeding up, therefore more force must be acting on one side than on the other. However, if the object was moving at a constant speed or was stationary, then the forces would be balanced.
Terminal speed refers to the constant speed that an object reaches when the drag force acting on it equals the driving force. This means the object no longer accelerates and continues moving at a constant velocity. It occurs when the drag force and gravitational force are balanced.
When a boat is moving at a constant velocity on a flat surface, the forces acting on the boat are balanced. The force of propulsion forward is equal to the force of drag resistance opposing motion, and the force of buoyancy is equal to the force of gravity acting on the boat.
on a still car the weight force is down, and is balanced with the reaction force (working upwards). friction of forward and balanced with drag - backwards. ;)
When the thrust force is equal to the drag force, the object will maintain a constant velocity (assuming no other forces are acting on it). This state is known as dynamic equilibrium, where the forces are balanced and there is no acceleration.
In a parachute system, the balanced force is the air resistance (drag) acting against the force of gravity. The drag force slows down the descent of the parachute, creating a balanced force that allows it to glide safely to the ground. An unbalanced force would occur if the parachute experiences a sudden shift in wind direction or if there is a malfunction with the parachute system, causing it to descend faster or slower than intended.
No. This is because the object is speeding up, therefore more force must be acting on one side than on the other. However, if the object was moving at a constant speed or was stationary, then the forces would be balanced.
Terminal speed refers to the constant speed that an object reaches when the drag force acting on it equals the driving force. This means the object no longer accelerates and continues moving at a constant velocity. It occurs when the drag force and gravitational force are balanced.
When a boat is moving at a constant velocity on a flat surface, the forces acting on the boat are balanced. The force of propulsion forward is equal to the force of drag resistance opposing motion, and the force of buoyancy is equal to the force of gravity acting on the boat.
balanced force is when things are balanced.
Lift balances weight. Thrust balances drag.
If you consider drag as a force, that would be Newtons.If you consider drag as a force, that would be Newtons.If you consider drag as a force, that would be Newtons.If you consider drag as a force, that would be Newtons.
A boat moves at a constant velocity if the force provided by the propeller exactly balances the resistive forces such as drag and friction acting on the boat. Once the forces are balanced, the boat will continue moving at a constant velocity as long as the propeller keeps applying the same force.
Drag- APEX :)
Drag (air resistance). When a falling object reaches terminal velocity (continues to fall at a constant speed, but acceleration stops), the force of drag and the force of gravity are equal, but opposite in direction.