Position and Motion
Speed and Velocity
Forces and Acceleration
Balanced and Unbalanced Forces
Gravity and Friction
100

What is the location of an object called?

Its position.

100

What are the units of speed?

Distance per unit of time (e.g., m/s, km/h, mph).

100

What is a force?

Any push or pull.

100

What are balanced forces?

Forces that act on an object without changing its motion; they add up to zero.

100

What is gravity?

A noncontact force that pulls objects toward each other.

200

What is a change in an object's position called?

Motion.

200

How is velocity different from speed?

Velocity includes direction; speed does not.

200

What can a force cause an object to do?

Start moving, change direction, speed up, slow down, or stop.

200

What is inertia?

The tendency of an object in motion to stay in motion, or an object at rest to stay at rest.

200

What is friction?

A force between surfaces that slows objects or stops them from moving.

300

Name three things needed to fully describe motion.

Distance, direction, and time.

300

Which is fastest: giraffe (14 m/s), eagle (33 m/s), horse (21 m/s), or cheetah (30 m/s)?

The eagle, at 33 m/s (73.8 mph).

300

What two factors affect the acceleration of an object?

The amount of force acting on it, and the weight (mass) of the object.

300

What is the net (total) force on an object?

The sum of all forces acting on it.

300

What two factors affect the gravitational pull between two objects?

The amount of mass in the objects and the distance between them.

400

If an object moves 12 km in one hour on a bike, what is its speed?

12 km/h

400

A plane travels 640 km south in 2 hours. What is its average velocity?

320 km/h south.

400

If the same force is applied to two objects of different weights, which accelerates more slowly?

The heavier object accelerates more slowly.

400

If the total force on an object equals zero, what happens to its motion?

The object will not accelerate — it stays at rest or keeps moving at the same speed and direction.

400

Why does a feather fall slower than a pencil (in air)?

Air resistance acts on the feather more, slowing it down. Without air, both would fall at the same rate.

500

What does it mean if a plane's average velocity is 320 km/h south for 2 hours?

It flew 640 km south in 2 hours — velocity includes both speed AND direction.

500

If a moving object changes direction while keeping the same speed, is it accelerating? Why?

Yes — because the direction of velocity changes, it is still accelerating.

500

What is the difference between a contact force and a noncontact force? Give one example of each.

Contact forces require objects to touch (e.g., a bat hitting a baseball); noncontact forces act without touching (e.g., gravity).

500

Explain how unbalanced forces affect a skateboarder who is at rest on a slope.

An unbalanced force causes her to start moving. Unbalanced forces can continue to change her speed and direction.

500

Explain how both gravity and friction would affect a roller coaster car.

Gravity pulls the car down hills, increasing its speed. Friction between the wheels and track slows the car, eventually bringing it to a stop.