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As the elevator begins to move upward, the reading on the scale will momentarily increase. Conversely, as the elevator starts to move downward, the reading on the scale will momentarily decrease. This change in reading is due to the acceleration experienced by the occupants of the elevator, causing a shift in apparent weight.
If the upward force acting on an object is greater than the downward force (its weight or force of gravity), the object will experience a net upward force causing it to accelerate in the upward direction. This could lead to the object moving upwards, overcoming the force of gravity pulling it downward.
Upward displacement refers to an object's change in position moving in an upward direction, while downward displacement refers to an object's change in position moving in a downward direction along a vertical axis. These displacements are measured vertically from a reference point, such as the starting position of the object.
An upward slant is known as an incline or ascent, while a downward slant is called a decline or descent. These terms are often used to describe the direction or angle of a slope or surface.
The upward force is called lift, while the downward force is called weight or gravity.
downward
downward
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).
As the elevator begins to move upward, the reading on the scale will momentarily increase. Conversely, as the elevator starts to move downward, the reading on the scale will momentarily decrease. This change in reading is due to the acceleration experienced by the occupants of the elevator, causing a shift in apparent weight.
UPWARD UPWARD UPWARD
Upward.
This is called a strike-slip fault.
fishstick
Subsidue-moving downward Uplift-moving upward Thrust-moving side-to-side
The upward and the downward bias refers to the overestimation or overstatement by a statistical measure of a given event.
positive air pressure then hit a negative air pressure.
downward