Yes, as sound can cause force.
The object is moving at the speed of 50 ms-1 .
Yes, it can happen. when the velocity is momentarily zero while an object is changing from moving in the positive direction motion to the negative direction; the object obviously will stop at one point, but will still have a constant acceleration.
It is easier to push a moving object than an object of the same mass because the weight on the moving object is less and out more.... I know this doesn't quite make sense but email me at oliviabastianich@Gmail.com for a better explenation... i will help in the next 12 hours!
An object which is not changing in it's position in space. In simply it is at rest
the object's displacement.
Stop
It a bouncing sound
The object would not cease moving, as there is no friction to act like a brake.
No
Gravity
A devise to slow or stop a moving object.
straight
This is called the Doppler effect. A sound-producing object coming closer will sound louder than a sound-producing object moving away. The speed of this moving object effects how much this is noticeable. See link in the discussion area.
To drive onto a moving object (as, for example, up a ramp onto a moving trailer), you must be going faster than the object to move forward up the ramp, but when you come to a stop relative to the object, you will be moving with the object, so must be moving at the same speed. You must, in fact, decelerate to a stop on the object, or your faster approach speed would carry you through and beyond it.
When balanced forces are applied to a moving object, the object likely slow and eventually stop. How quickly that occurs depends on the amount of force.
A force or acceleration
It will stop moving.