This is the rate of change of position with respect to time.
What is Velocity?
This law states F=ma
The unit of energy in the SI system.
What is Joule?
This is the product of mass and velocity.
What is Momentum?
This is the number of complete cycles per second (unit:Hz)
What is frequency?
On Earth, this constant has a value of approximately 9.8 m/s^2
What is acceleration due to gravity? or What is g?
This is the force that opposes the motion of two surfaces in contact.
What is Friction?
This type of energy depends on motion,
What is Kinetic Energy?
In any closed system, momentum is what during a collision?
What is Conserved? or What is Remains Constant?
This is the maximum displacement from equilibrium in a wave.
What is Amplitude?
This vector quantity describes how velocity changes over time.
What is acceleration?
Every action has an equal and opposite this.
What is Reaction (Newton's Third Law)?
This type of energy depends on position.
What is Gravitational Potential Energy?
This term means "Force times time"
What is Impulse?
This upward force is felt by any object submerged in a fluid.
What is Buoyant Force?
On a velocity-time graph, this physical quantity is represented by the slope.
What is acceleration?
Diagram drawn with arrows representing every force acting on an object.
What is Free Body Diagram? Or What is FBD?
This says total energy in a closed system stays constant.
What is Conservation of Energy?
This type of collision conserves kinetic energy.
What is elastic collision?
This Greek scientist discovered the buoyant force principle.
Who is Archimedes?
On a velocity-time graph, this quantity is represented by the area under the curve.
What is displacement? or What is change in position?
This 17th-centure English scientist developed the three laws of motion.
What is Sir Isaac Newton?
Rate of doing work or transferring energy.
What is Power?
This type of collision conserves only momentum.
What is Inelastic Collision?
For a pendulum: T=2pi Sqrt (L/?)
What is g?