This law explains why a book resting on a table stays at rest unless you push or pull it.
1st Law
An object with a mass of 5 kg accelerates at 2 m/s². This is the quantity exerted on the object.
10 N
This phenomenon explains why a stationary ball will only move when you kick it
Inertia
This law is the reason a soccer ball goes flying when you kick it with more force.
2nd Law
A 10 kg cart experiences an acceleration of 3 m/s². This is the amount needed to produce this acceleration.
30 N
This term describes the resistance felt when you try to slide a heavy box across the floor.
Friction
This law explains why a balloon flies in the opposite direction when you let go of it.
3rd law
9.8 N
This quantity of this necessary to move an object increases when either the mass or acceleration of an object increases.
Force
This law explains why two ice skaters pushing off each other glide in opposite directions at different speeds, based on their masses
What is the Law of Conservation of Momentum?
A car with a mass of 1,000 kg accelerates at 1.5 m/s². This is the total quantity exerted on the car.
1500 N
This force is responsible for an apple falling from a tree toward Earth
Gravity
This law describes why objects fall to Earth and why the planets orbit the Sun.
What is the Law of Gravity?
This quantity must be applied to accelerate a 15 kg sled at 4 m/s².
60 N
This effect is why passengers lurch forward when a car suddenly stops, even though they were sitting still relative to the car
Momentum