gravity
True. When a ball is thrown into the air, Earth's gravitational force causes the ball to accelerate downward, creating an unbalanced force.
Gravity is the force which makes a thrown ball fall back to the ground. It is the force which attracts all objects to the Earth.
The force exerted by Earth on a ball thrown into the air is the force of gravity. Gravity is a fundamental force that pulls objects towards the center of the Earth. As the ball goes up, gravity acts to bring it back down towards the Earth's surface.
While the ball does exert a force on Earth according to Newton's third law of motion, the force exerted by the ball on Earth is much smaller compared to the force exerted by Earth on the ball due to Earth's much larger mass. This makes the effect of the ball's force on Earth negligible in comparison.
Since you need to exert force on the ball to push it away from you, the ball will obviously push back (with a force that has the same magnitude, but is in the opposite direction). This is an example of Newton's Third Law.
True. When a ball is thrown into the air, Earth's gravitational force causes the ball to accelerate downward, creating an unbalanced force.
Gravity is the force which makes a thrown ball fall back to the ground. It is the force which attracts all objects to the Earth.
The force exerted by Earth on a ball thrown into the air is the force of gravity. Gravity is a fundamental force that pulls objects towards the center of the Earth. As the ball goes up, gravity acts to bring it back down towards the Earth's surface.
While the ball does exert a force on Earth according to Newton's third law of motion, the force exerted by the ball on Earth is much smaller compared to the force exerted by Earth on the ball due to Earth's much larger mass. This makes the effect of the ball's force on Earth negligible in comparison.
The ball is affected by the force of the earth's gravity.
The ball is affected by the force of the earth's gravity.
Since you need to exert force on the ball to push it away from you, the ball will obviously push back (with a force that has the same magnitude, but is in the opposite direction). This is an example of Newton's Third Law.
Yes, when a ball is thrown up in the air, gravity is still acting on it. Gravity is the force that causes objects to be pulled towards the center of the Earth.
Yes, when a ball is thrown into the air, the force of gravity acting on the ball causes it to accelerate downward. Since there is no force opposing gravity, the ball moves in a parabolic trajectory until it eventually comes back down due to the unbalanced force acting on it.
The force of friction is not acting upon a ball that is thrown in the air. Friction is a force that opposes motion, but when a ball is thrown in the air, there is no surface contact for friction to act upon.
-50 N
The force that acts on a bowling ball is gravity pulling it downward towards the center of the Earth. Additionally, when the ball is thrown or rolled, external forces such as friction and air resistance will also act on it.