Every force has magnitude, direction, and point of application. Magnitude refers to the intensity of the force, direction denotes the path along which the force acts, and point of application signifies the location on an object where the force is exerted.
Every force has a magnitude and direction.
The force that every object exerts on every other object is gravity. Gravity is a universal force of attraction between all masses in the universe, pulling objects towards each other.
Gravity is the force that pulls every mass towards every other mass. This force is responsible for keeping planets in orbit around the sun and objects on Earth grounded.
The contact force exists for every other force. It is responsible for the interaction between two objects that are in direct contact with each other. Examples include friction, tension, normal force, and air resistance.
The two properties described are magnitude (20 newtons) and direction (southeast).
No. You also need to know the properties of the rubber band - specifically, how much it stretches for every unit of force applied.
Every force has a magnitude and direction.
Mass and force
The force that every object exerts on every other object is gravity. Gravity is a universal force of attraction between all masses in the universe, pulling objects towards each other.
Gravity is the force that pulls every mass towards every other mass. This force is responsible for keeping planets in orbit around the sun and objects on Earth grounded.
The contact force exists for every other force. It is responsible for the interaction between two objects that are in direct contact with each other. Examples include friction, tension, normal force, and air resistance.
it depends on the attrective force between the molecules
Re-Action Force.
The arrangement of electrons in atoms determines their chemical properties. Specifically, the number of electrons in an atom's outermost energy level (valence electrons) and how easily those electrons can be gained, lost, or shared with other atoms dictate the chemical behavior of an element.
There are four properties of force: gravitation, electromagnetism, the weak interaction, and the strong interaction.
The two properties described are magnitude (20 newtons) and direction (southeast).
Gravity, acceleration, weight, and force.