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The words depart and remain are antonyms. They have opposite meaning. If you depart, you did not remain. If you remain, you did not depart.
yes. If the forces acting on the a moving particle are in equilibrium, (e.g. when a spherical object reaches terminal velocity (neglecting increased air resistance as it gets closer to the ground)) then the particle will be moving at a velocity, that is not 0, yet the velocity will remain constant, and the body will not accelerate or decelerate in any direction, and thus the acceleration is 0.
Pascal's law (pressure exerted anywhere in a confined incompressible fluid is transmitted equally in all directions throughout the fluid such that the pressure variations (initial differences) remain the same)... and one common application would be a hydraulic lift (such as those used in garages to raise cars off the ground for inspection).
The first example that came to me was driving. Suppose you're in a car on a flat, level surface, not moving. Will you remain stationary? The answer is yes, of course. In order to move the car, you must apply some force (either by manually pushing it, or by making the engine do the hard work for you). This is the basic principle of Newton's 1st. "An object at rest will remain at rest until another force acts upon it."
No. Remained is the past tense and past participle of the verb (to remain), but for this verb there is no adverb for this or the adjective / present participle remaining).
Assuming your cylinder is fixed and has something like a piston allowing for potential movement, the volume will remain the same. The gas will become less densed, as with pressure its more dense.
Assuming your cylinder is fixed and has something like a piston allowing for potential movement, the volume will remain the same. The gas will become less densed, as with pressure its more dense.
The function of grease is to remain in contact with and lubricate moving surfaces without leaking out under gravity or centrifugal action, or be squeezed out under pressure.
ammonia....'_'
Inertia is the tendency of a moving object to remain moving. I am not aware of any "components".
No, both the continental and oceanic plates are always moving. Moving slowly, but always moving.
"Constant pressure" means the pressure must not change.
it will be in the same direction in which it is moving. If it is not moving it will remain at rest
No. High pressure is pressure that is higher than an established normal pressure. The pressure may be rising, falling, or remain the same
Inertia
The pressure increases.
remain somewhere without moving or being moved.