Asked by IGotYa
A sledgehammer is swung at a wall. Once the sledgehammer hits the wall it does not breakthrough. How do the hammer and the wall act on each other?(1 point)
Responses
The hammer exerts a stronger force than the wall but in the opposite direction.
The hammer exerts a stronger force than the wall but in the opposite direction.
The hammer exerts a stronger force than the wall but in the same direction.
The hammer exerts a stronger force than the wall but in the same direction.
The hammer and the wall exert forces on each other that are equal in magnitude and in the same direction.
The hammer and the wall exert forces on each other that are equal in magnitude and in the same direction.
The hammer and the wall exert forces on each other that are equal in magnitude but in opposite directions.
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
The hammer and the wall exert forces on each other that are equal in magnitude but in opposite directions.
(They are an action–reaction pair per Newton's 3rd law — the forces act on different objects, so they do not cancel.)
(They are an action–reaction pair per Newton's 3rd law — the forces act on different objects, so they do not cancel.)
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