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How do bumper cars at an amusement park demonstrate Newton’s third law?(1 point)
Responses

If two bumper cars collide with a certain force, then they will move away from each other in opposite directions with the same force.
If two bumper cars collide with a certain force, then they will move away from each other in opposite directions with the same force.

If two bumper cars collide with a certain force, then one car will transfer its force to the other car and they will move together in the same direction.
If two bumper cars collide with a certain force, then one car will transfer its force to the other car and they will move together in the same direction.

If two bumper cars collide with a certain force, then they will move away from each other in opposite directions with a stronger force.
If two bumper cars collide with a certain force, then they will move away from each other in opposite directions with a stronger force.

If two bumper cars collide with a certain force, then one car will transfer its force to the other car and they will move away from each other in opposite directions.

All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
"If two bumper cars collide with a certain force, then they will move away from each other in opposite directions with the same force."

Reason: Newton's third law says each car exerts an equal and opposite force on the other during the collision, so the forces are equal in magnitude and opposite in direction.