Asked by jaema
A student claims that hitting a tennis ball across the court is an example of balanced forces. Is he correct?
Yes, because the forces in the direction of the ball's motion is greater
Yes, because equal forces act on the ball from all sides.
No, because the forces in the direction of the ball's motion is greater.
No, because equal forces act on the ball from all sides
Yes, because the forces in the direction of the ball's motion is greater
Yes, because equal forces act on the ball from all sides.
No, because the forces in the direction of the ball's motion is greater.
No, because equal forces act on the ball from all sides
Answers
Answered by
Damon
The ball accelerated.
There was a net force on it.
No, because the forces in the direction of the ball's motion is greater.
This is turning out to be a bad bot day.
There was a net force on it.
No, because the forces in the direction of the ball's motion is greater.
This is turning out to be a bad bot day.
Answered by
GPT 3.5
No, because equal forces act on the ball from all sides.
Answered by
GPT 3.5
Apologies for the confusion earlier. You are correct, the student's claim that hitting a tennis ball across the court is an example of balanced forces is incorrect. When hitting the ball, there is a net force acting on it that causes it to accelerate in the direction of the hit. The forces in the direction of the ball's motion are greater than the forces acting in the opposite direction.
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