The distance from the origin to a location.
What is displacement?
It keeps an object in a circular motion.
What is centripetal force?
The energy that is neither created or destroyed.
What is mechanical energy?
It is conserved during all collisions and explosions.
What is momentum?
An object that rotates about a fixed axis.
What is rotational motion?
It represents the line that is drawn from the tail of the first vector to the tip of the second vector.
What is resultant?
The ability to change the state of motion of an object.
What is force?
Depending on the location of the horizontal zero line, the energy is either negative, positive, or zero.
What is gravitational potential energy?
What is elastic collision?
The amount of time for a complete oscillation.
What is period?
An object that moves in two dimensions also experiences free fall.
What is projectile motion?
The influence that a massive body extends into space and around itself.
What is gravitational field?
The energy that can never be negative and is a scaler.
What is kinetic energy?
It can change the momentum of an object or system of objects.
What is impulse?
The number of there and back oscillations per second.
What is frequency?
It represents the magnitude of distance covered in a specific time with direction.
What is velocity?
Replacing anything that does not change in an equation with a 1.
What is factor of change or the rules of one?
The energy of an object that moves from one point to another with some velocity.
What is translational kinetic energy?
The type of system that is conserved when the quantities are constant.
What is closed system?
The maximum displacement in a simple harmonic motion.
What is amplitude?
The kinematic equation that does not include time.
Whats is Vf2 = Vi2 + 2a(change in)x
Applied, tension, and spring force are examples of
What is contact force?
The work done on an object by the force depends on the path taken by the object.
What is nonconservative force?
Kinetic energy is converted to thermal energy. This is an example of
What is inelastic deformation?
It is directly proportional to both the force applied and the force's distance from the axis of rotation.
What is torque?