If a force of 5N is applied to the right and another force of 5N is applied to the left on an object, the forces will cancel each other out and the object will remain at rest or continue moving at a constant velocity if it was already in motion.
The net force acting on the object is 6 newtons to the left. This is calculated by subtracting the force pulling to the right (3N) from the force pulling to the left (9N).
The net force is 4 N to the right (9 N - 5 N = 4 N).
If something appears to be moving to the left of you, it means that its motion is directed towards your left side relative to your own position. This can occur if the object is actually moving to the left, or if you are moving to the right while the object remains stationary. Another possibility is that the object is stationary, but you are moving to the left.
Take the sum of the forces on the object on the horizontal plane(x-direction) with the positive direction being to the right. The 80 newtons to the right is +80N and the 80 newtons acting to the left is -80N. Add them up, so 80N - 80N = 0 N. The total force acting on the object is 0.
The object will experience a net force of 7 N to the right (20 N - 13 N), causing it to accelerate in that direction.
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The application of force on object (without opposing forces) results in acceleration in the direction of the vector. In this case the unbalanced force to the left will accelerate the object to the right.
The net force acting on the object is 6 newtons to the left. This is calculated by subtracting the force pulling to the right (3N) from the force pulling to the left (9N).
An unbalance force is one that is not opposed by an equal and opposite force operating directly against the force intended to cause a change in the object's state of motion or rest. Consider this little illustration: Object, O is at rest and subjected to a force from the left as shown: Let ====> represent the force to change the object's state of motion or rest on object. O This unopposed (unbalanced) force will cause the object to move to the right. ====> O Let O <==> O <========, the larger force coming from the right is unbalance by the one from the left. Thus, the object will move toward the left. The picture is more complicated that I can illustrate here because an opposing force my be impinging on the object from an angle. Overall, it is the "net" unbalanced force that will cause the object to move or change its state of motion.
The net force is 4 N to the right (9 N - 5 N = 4 N).
If the forces act in same direction then by vector addition answer should be 49N . But answer will be different if forces are in different directions .
If something appears to be moving to the left of you, it means that its motion is directed towards your left side relative to your own position. This can occur if the object is actually moving to the left, or if you are moving to the right while the object remains stationary. Another possibility is that the object is stationary, but you are moving to the left.
Take the sum of the forces on the object on the horizontal plane(x-direction) with the positive direction being to the right. The 80 newtons to the right is +80N and the 80 newtons acting to the left is -80N. Add them up, so 80N - 80N = 0 N. The total force acting on the object is 0.
The object will experience a net force of 7 N to the right (20 N - 13 N), causing it to accelerate in that direction.
The direction of force is the pathway along which a force is applied to an object. It can be described using terms such as up, down, left, right, forward, backward, and at various angles to indicate the orientation of the force relative to the object. Understanding the direction of force is crucial in analyzing the resulting motion or deformation of an object.
The stronger force overpowers the weaker voice. Say that the stronger force is pushing a box to the left, and the weaker force is pushing the box to the right. The stronger force will overpower the weaker force, and the box will move to the left.
Consider an object in empty space. There are two forces pushing from opposite sides, one force (force A) on the left pushing with 2 newtons of force, the other (force B) on the right pushing with 1 newton. Since force A is pushing with a greater force than force B, the result will be the object moving right. The object is also moving with a force of 1 newton, because force A is 1 newton greater than force B.