This is the distance an object travels in a certain amount of time.
What is speed?
The formula is (final velocity - initial velocity / time) for this concept.
What is Acceleration?
Force = Mass times Acceleration is this Newton's Law.
What is Newton's Second Law?
This is a force always acts to oppose motion
What is friction?
This is the definition of "Force."
This is speed with a direction.
What is velocity?
On Earth, acceleration due to gravity is this.
What is 9.8 m/s2?
This is an object resistance to a change in motion.
What is intertia?
This Law explains why you must wear a seat belt.
What is Newton's First Law or the Law of Inertia?
This changes as gravitational force changes.
What is weight?
On a speed graph, the x-axis is time and this is on the y-axis.
What is distance?
This is demonstrated when an object is speeding up, slowing down, or traveling around a corner.
What is acceleration?
This Law explains why every object in the universe has a gravitational attraction to every other object in the universe.
What the Law of Universal Gravitation?
This explains why a balled up paper hits the ground first compared to a flat sheet of paper.
What is air resistance?
This is acceleration toward the center of a curved or circular path.
What is centripetal acceleration?
Any object that can be flung, fired, or thrown is called this.
What is a projectile?
This is the type of acceleration a car displays when it goes from 25 mph to a stop.
What is Negative Acceleration?
This Law explains why the total amount of momentum always remains constant.
What is The Law of Conservation of Momentum?
This is the air resistance that opposes forward motion of an airplane
What is drag?
This is the total amount of forces acting upon an object.
What is net force?
A submarine can travel both on the surface of the water and underwater because it can change this.
On an acceleration graph, the x-axis will be labeled time and y-axis will have this label.
What is speed?
This Newton's Law explains why the moon stays in orbit around the earth.
What is Newton's First Law?
This type of friction explains why napkins stay on a tablecloth even though there is a slight breeze.
What is Static Friction?
This is the force exerted per unit area on matter.
What is pressure?