Just like in the construction of Super Speedways for professional race car use, the incorporation of a tilted or banked turn allows the car to maintain higher speeds throughout the turns of the course. The forces that act upon a vehicle as it is turning at high speeds causes the car to experience a phenomenon known as under-steering, that is, the tendency of the vehicle to want to continue driving in a straight line instead of turning due to the forces acting upon the vehicle and the inability of tire traction to compensate for these forces. Race car drivers will have to use more braking to slow the car to acceptable speeds in order to establish enough traction to maneuver the turn on a flat track. However, if the track is banked, this will reduce the severity of forces acting upon the vehicle and reduce the amount of traction required to hold the car in a turn, resulting in less braking required, thus, higher speeds throughout the entire turn. Since a toy car does not have brakes, it cannot slow down, and if the turn is too tight and not banked, the toy car will simply fly off the track because of the under-steering phenomenon.
Changing the slope of the ramp will affect the speed of the vehicle going down it.
- The slope and length of the ramp. - The rolling friction between the tires and the ramp/ground. - The air resistance (which is dependent on the velocity and geometrical shape of the car). - The direction and speed of the wind. - The smoothness of the ground (a rugged surface will slow the car down).
The larger the angle of the ramp, the faster the car will go down it.
If you are talking about a car rolling down a ramp then yes. The taller the ramp the more momentum the car will create there for the car will travel farther and faster.
It will not, unless it is acted upon another force. If it's rolling on something, then friction will stop it (the ball rubbing on the table slows it down).
The minimum speed for a ball rolling down an incline occurs near the top. Gravity will speed the ball up as it travels down.
Yes, the texture of what something is rolling on can affect its speed. Rough surfaces create more friction, slowing down the object. Smooth surfaces have less friction, allowing the object to roll faster.
Mass does not affect the acceleration of an object due to gravity. Any object of any size or mass will fall at the same speed. A ball rolling down an inclined plane is accelerated by gravity, so its speed won't be affected by its mass at all.
yes it does. i just did the experiment.
On carpet the friction is more as it is a rough surface therefore it stops or slow down a rolling ball.
Yes because it is just like a ball rolling down a hill; it obviously goes faster.
Changing the slope of the ramp will affect the speed of the vehicle going down it.
no impossible
Yes. The height of the ramp does affect the speed going down it the higher the ramp the faster the car goes down it
Yes, It depends on the speed but it slows it down.
It would affect its speed because the weight of the car is gonna slow it down
- The slope and length of the ramp. - The rolling friction between the tires and the ramp/ground. - The air resistance (which is dependent on the velocity and geometrical shape of the car). - The direction and speed of the wind. - The smoothness of the ground (a rugged surface will slow the car down).