It will go faster, just like a boy scout pine wood derby car.
Faster. You see, adding more mass to the object pulls it down faster than when it had a lesser amount. Now that you've added more mass to your car, the gravitational pull will allow it to zoom on down the ramp. Forget about driving that thing UP the ramp! (:
if an object is lightr it will fall slower because gravity wont take it down as fast if it is heavier it will make the gravity pull it down faster
Yes, As a Boy scout we would weight our cars so that they would travel faster.
Does... not... compute... Too many missing variables, or just a poorly written question.
Momentum. Distance divided by time is speed. Mass times speed is momentum.
same speed horizontally, acceleration is downwards
No. Because of their mass, they travel slower than c.
Nothing with mass can travel at the speed of light, and nothing with mass can travel faster than the speed of light. The speed of light is 186,000 miles per second. The faster an object travels, the heavier it gets. An object traveling near the speed of light would weigh countless tons and be too heavy to move. Neutrinos (sub atomic particles) which might travel faster than light have no mass and are not effected by the increase in weight with the increase in speed. Lions can only run about 20 mph, much slower than the speed of light. Cheetahs can only run about 25 mph. again, much slower than light speed.
Normally, a ball with more mass would roll faster down a hill, but, it will go slower when kicked or rolled.
Faster. You see, adding more mass to the object pulls it down faster than when it had a lesser amount. Now that you've added more mass to your car, the gravitational pull will allow it to zoom on down the ramp. Forget about driving that thing UP the ramp! (:
It depends upon the mass of the particles also. Assuming equal mass, then the slower moving particle gains some energy, and the faster moving particle loses energy. However, if the slower moving particle had greater mass, it could transfer energy to the faster moving particle.
they have less mass. heavier objects have a great mass so it gets pulled down faster..... by a little thing called......gravity!
No it doesn't. The scenario is completely unrealistic anyway, because if it has any mass at any slower speed, then at the speed of light its mass is infinite.
When any object with mass moves, no matter at what speed, its mass increases. The faster it moves, the faster its mass increases. And the closer to the speed of light it moves, the closer to infinity its mass grows.
There's no connection. A truck can travel either faster OR slower than a turtle.
Photons (light particles) have zero mass, so it is doubtful whether you can make something with LESS mass than that.Anything with a mass of zero can ONLY move at the speed of light.Anything with a positive mass can only move SLOWER than the speed of light.There are good reasons to believe that nothing can move FASTER than the speed of light.
A large mass would have a slower speed, because the force is the same. This follows from Newton's Second Law: F = ma.A large mass would have a slower speed, because the force is the same. This follows from Newton's Second Law: F = ma.A large mass would have a slower speed, because the force is the same. This follows from Newton's Second Law: F = ma.A large mass would have a slower speed, because the force is the same. This follows from Newton's Second Law: F = ma.