gravity
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capillary pressure
Compression
When you jump out of a plane, you experience the force of gravity pulling you towards the Earth. This force causes you to accelerate as you fall towards the ground. The force of gravity acting on you is roughly 9.8 meters per second squared.
The force that causes acceleration is known as net force.
The application of 75N of force through a distance of 8 meters results in 600 newton-meters = 600 joules of work.
A torque is a force that produces or tends to produce rotation or torsion. It is a twisting force that causes an object to rotate around an axis. Torque is measured in units of force multiplied by distance, such as newton-meters.
The force is called torque when you turn something. Torque is a rotational force that causes an object to rotate around an axis. It is typically measured in units of force multiplied by distance (e.g., Newton-meters or foot-pounds).
It's either LESS force over a GREATER distance or MORE force over a SHORTER distance.
Torque
Newtonmeters are a unit used to measure torque, which is the force that causes an object to rotate around an axis. It combines the unit of force (Newtons) with the unit of distance (meters) to quantify how much force is being applied to rotate an object.
Electricity is the force of what causes static cling in a dryer.
The gravitational force exerted by Earth on an object is approximately 9.81 meters per second squared (m/s^2). This force is what gives weight to objects on Earth and causes objects to fall towards the ground when dropped.
A big force applied for a short time causes a bigger change in momentum compared to a small force applied for a longer time. This is because momentum is the product of force and time, so a larger force produces a greater change in momentum in a shorter duration.