Asked by xen
In which situation is the magnitude of the total force greater than the magnitude of each of the individual forces?(1 point)
Responses
Two people stand on opposite sides of a large box. One pushes, and the other pulls with the same amount of force.
Two people stand on opposite sides of a large box. One pushes, and the other pulls with the same amount of force.
Four people stand on each side of a large box. All four people push the box with the same amount of force.
Four people stand on each side of a large box. All four people push the box with the same amount of force.
Four people stand on each side of a large box. All four people pull the box with the same amount of force.
Four people stand on each side of a large box. All four people pull the box with the same amount of force.
Two people stand on the same side of a large box. One pushes, and the other pulls with the same amount of force.
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
Two people stand on the same side of a large box. One pushes, and the other pulls with the same amount of force.
Explanation: when forces act in the same direction their magnitudes add, so the net force (2F) is greater than each individual force (F). If forces are opposite (people on opposite sides), they subtract and can cancel.
Explanation: when forces act in the same direction their magnitudes add, so the net force (2F) is greater than each individual force (F). If forces are opposite (people on opposite sides), they subtract and can cancel.
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