The action force is the force exerted by the hammer on the nail. The reaction force is the force exerted by the nail on the hammer, according to Newton's third law of motion.
The reaction force when a hammer hits a nail is called the law of motion. This motion falls under Newton's Third Law.
When a hammer hits a nail, the force applied by the hammer causes the nail to experience an equal and opposite reaction force. This reaction force drives the nail into the surface it is being hammered into.
The equal action and reaction forces do not cancel each other out when one person hits a ball because they act on different objects. The force exerted by the person hitting the ball causes the ball to accelerate in the direction of the force, while the reaction force from the ball pushes back on the person, causing them to feel the impact of hitting the ball.
Magnetic (north and south poles are equal and opposite) otherwise Newton says every action has an equal but opposite reaction. If you punch a wall your fist hits the wall at the same rate the wall damages your fist.
When a hammer hits a nail, the kinetic energy of the moving hammer is converted into mechanical energy. This mechanical energy drives the nail into the surface it is being hammered into.
striking of bug is action while bug getting hurt is reaction -Thunder
The hammer exerts a force on the nail; the nail exerts a force on the hammer.
The reaction force when a hammer hits a nail is called the law of motion. This motion falls under Newton's Third Law.
When a hammer hits a nail, the force applied by the hammer causes the nail to experience an equal and opposite reaction force. This reaction force drives the nail into the surface it is being hammered into.
The action and reaction forces act on different objects. For two forces to cancel each other - and provide a net force of zero, for Newton's First Law - they must act on the same object.
The reaction force when a hammer hits a nail is called the law of motion. This motion falls under Newton's Third Law.
The equal action and reaction forces do not cancel each other out when one person hits a ball because they act on different objects. The force exerted by the person hitting the ball causes the ball to accelerate in the direction of the force, while the reaction force from the ball pushes back on the person, causing them to feel the impact of hitting the ball.
According to Newton's Third Law, every action has an equal and opposite reaction. So, action-reaction forces are equal in magnitude (size) and opposite in direction. For example, a bug hits the windshield of a car. The force of the car on the bug is equal to the force of the bug on the car. The accelerations of the two are obviously different, because acceleration depends on mass. Unintuivie, but true.
The force of the hammer is much greater than the force of the nail. Gravity pulls down the hammer, hits the nail, and the nail forces up, but the force of gravity wins over the force pulling on the nail.
DAO = Double Action Only. Pulling the trigger cocks the hammer (striker) until the trigger breaks and the hammer (or striker) hits the firing pin. A striker is like an internal hammer.
projectile motion (vertical and horizontal motion) when the pitcher throws the ball and when the batter hits it.plus friction when people slip. and air resistance, and force of the ball, and action-reaction forces
A reaction force is directly opposite of action force.If a ball hit another ball, they actually hit each other at the same time with the same force if they are of the same size and mass.If a ball hit a football player, then the football player equally hit the ball but in proportion to mass. This happen at the same time.Now for the tricky part.The action force could be considered to trigger a reaction force different to what it would normally be because it is observed. Would this not make reaction force before action force?Still probably not valid.As a reaction force is directly opposite of action force, it would not matter if the football player hits the ball hard or not so hard as a result of what he sees. Energy exchanged will be different, but always in proportion to mass.The football player would only be exchanging action and reaction force with other objects/players before hitting the football, making another exchange of energy.Claim:All exchange of energy happens at the same time for both objects in proportion to their mass no matter the circumstances.Newtons third law.