rest and motion are indeed relative terms take for example, you are standing on a platform and see a train speeding past you. the train is definitely in motion with respect to you. now, think of a passenger in the same train..to the passenger the train in at rest but he sees the platform speeding past him, meaning you appear to be in motion with respect to him... this concept is very much relative, as the earth like all the other planets including the sun are actually moving. so though the computer in front of you may seem to be at rest with respect to you, it is actually in motion if someone from the moon or some other planet sees it...:-)
rest and motion are indeed relative terms take for example, you are standing on a platform and see a train speeding past you. the train is definitely in motion with respect to you. now, think of a passenger in the same train..to the passenger the train in at rest but he sees the platform speeding past him, meaning you appear to be in motion with respect to him... this concept is very much relative, as the earth like all the other planets including the sun are actually moving. so though the computer in front of you may seem to be at rest with respect to you, it is actually in motion if someone from the moon or some other planet sees it...:-)
With respect to a state of rest or apparent rest.
a object is said to be motion if it position with respect it changes with time
When an object changes its position with respect to time, then the body is said ti be in 'motion'. When the body is at rest, it is state of 'no motion'.
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The transitive property of motion states that if object A is moving with respect to object B, and object B is moving with respect to object C, then object A is also moving with respect to object C. This property can be used to describe the motion of objects in a reference frame.
Motion is described with respect to a frame of reference, which is a point of view used to measure and describe the position, speed, and acceleration of objects in motion. This frame of reference can be stationary or moving, depending on what is being observed.
MOTION: A body is said to be in motion if it changes it's position with respect to it's surrounding. REST: A body is said to be in rest if it does not changes it's position with respect to it's surrounding.
Motion is described in respect to a frame of reference, which serves as a fixed point or object against which movement is measured. This frame of reference can be stationary or in motion itself, and helps to determine an object's speed, direction, and acceleration.
The derivative of distance with respect to time in the context of motion is the velocity of an object. It represents how fast the object is moving at a specific moment in time.
Motion is related to the change in position of an object with respect to time. It involves an object moving from one point to another, typically described in terms of displacement, velocity, and acceleration. Motion can be linear, rotational, or a combination of both.