The force that causes you to move upward when you jump into the air is the normal force exerted by the ground on your feet. This force opposes the force of gravity acting on your body, allowing you to overcome gravity and move upward.
The force that opposes gravity and causes objects to move upward is called lift. Lift is generated by the flow of air over the wings of an aircraft or other aerodynamic surfaces, creating a pressure difference that pushes the object upward.
Hot air rises in the atmosphere because it is less dense than cold air, creating a buoyant force that causes it to move upward.
When a basketball is thrown upward, it is acted upon by gravity, which pulls it back down towards the ground. As it moves upward, its velocity decreases until it reaches its peak height and momentarily stops, then gravity causes it to accelerate back downward due to the force of gravity.
As the elevator moves upward, the reading on the scale will temporarily increase. This is because the scale measures the force exerted by the person standing on it, which includes their weight and an additional force due to the upward acceleration of the elevator.
When you exert force on an object that causes it to move, it is called mechanical work. Work is defined as the product of the force applied to an object and the distance over which the force is applied in the direction of the force.
When you jump off a skateboard, the action force is your downward push on the skateboard as you propel yourself upward. The reaction force is the skateboard pushing back against you with an equal and opposite force. This interaction causes the skateboard to move backward while you jump forward and upward. Newton's third law of motion explains this relationship between the forces.
Atmospheric pressure
The force that you exert on the Earth is equal to the force that the Earth exerts on you; for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction, so says Newton. What is different is the amount of motion that results. You move, and the Earth (apparently) does not. Actually the Earth is moving all the time, in its orbit around the sun and by rotating on its axis, but it does not noticeably move because you jump on the ground. And that is indeed because it is much more massive than you are. False.
The force that opposes gravity and causes objects to move upward is called lift. Lift is generated by the flow of air over the wings of an aircraft or other aerodynamic surfaces, creating a pressure difference that pushes the object upward.
Gravity is what gives us our weight. Weight causes downward resistance to our legs and jumping muscles. This slows down how fast we move, as well as less resistance of upward inertia. On the moon the force of graivity is much less, and thus our muscles have less resistance, and our upward inertia will continue more than if there were more gravity.
When you jump into a pool, your body displaces a volume of water equal to your own volume. This causes the water to move outward and upward, creating waves and ripples on the surface. As you enter, the water splashes and some may even spill over the pool's edges, depending on the height and force of your jump. The water then settles back into the pool, returning to a calm state.
The force that causes objects to move downward is gravity
capillary
The force of gravity makes the ball move downward. To move it upward, you need to supply enough force to compensate for this (to stop the downward motion) plus a little extra (to cause the ball to move upward).
A force that causes an object to move in a circle is a central force, or a centripetal force.
The driving force for the upward movement of warm molten rock in the mantle is primarily buoyancy. As molten rock is less dense than the surrounding solid rock, it rises due to its buoyancy forces. Additionally, convective currents within the mantle, driven by heat from Earth's core, also play a role in the movement of molten rock.
The force is work.