Yes, the force applied can be affected by a change in inclination, especially in situations involving gravity or friction. Changes in inclination can alter the components of the force acting in different directions, affecting the overall force applied.
The applied load is the force acting on a structure or material. The relationship between the applied load and force is direct - as the applied load increases, the force applied to the structure also increases. This relationship is described by Newton's second law of motion, F = m*a, where F is the force, m is the mass, and a is the acceleration.
We're forced to go out on a limb here and propose an answer without benefit ofthe "following" list of choices, since, apparently, the question was automaticallytruncated and the choices were lost. It's a shame you went to all that trouble tocopy the choices along with the question, only to see them deleted by some nasty 'bot'.Since the object accelerates in the direction of the applied force, the net force on it ...equal to the vector sum of the applied force and the friction force ... must point inthe direction of the applied force, and so the frictional force must be less than theapplied force.
I assume this is not a trick question of like the rope is not taut. If the rope is taut, the load will move to the combined force of the applied force and gravity, in the vector sense. In the simple case of the applied force being directly opposite to gravity, the load will rise straight up from the ground. If the applied force is perpendicular to gravity (that is, horizontal), the load will drop to the ground at an angle, depending on the sum of the two force vectors.
An applied force is a force that is applied to an object by a person or another object. It is a push or pull that one object exerts on another in a specific direction. Applied force can cause an object to move, change speed, or change direction.
a question related to how something will be used.
answer the question
your question is not very clear, although if i think the answer to your question would be, Yes, a science rule or theory can be applied to any matter. that's why it is a rule.
Yes, it has clearly not been applied to the phrasing of this question.
To answer a question we need a what, who, where, when, or how. Your question is a statement and doesn’t give us the information we need to answer.
This is a question about a job you have applied for and it is about YOUR expectations. How can anybody else but YOU know what YOUR expectations were?The question is therefore unanswerable.
Applied Economics A+
wasted or non-applied energy. Not sure of your question, poorly worded.
It appears the question for this task was about straight truck jobs, which can be applied for after you get your CDL license. This is usually only a few week course.
There is only one who can say correct,GOD
I don't understand your question please rephrase.
What's the question?