Asked by jayc
In which situation would the momentum of a moving object increase?(1 point)
Responses
A force acting in the direction of the object’s motion is removed from the object.
A force acting in the direction of the object’s motion is removed from the object.
A force acting in the direction opposite the object’s motion is removed from the object.
A force acting in the direction opposite the object’s motion is removed from the object.
Two forces of equal magnitude act on the object in opposite directions.
Two forces of equal magnitude act on the object in opposite directions.
A new force acts on the object, opposing the object’s motion.
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
A force acting in the direction opposite the object’s motion is removed from the object.
Explanation: Removing the opposing force produces a net force in the direction of motion (or reduces deceleration), so the object accelerates in its motion and its momentum increases (F_net = dp/dt).
Explanation: Removing the opposing force produces a net force in the direction of motion (or reduces deceleration), so the object accelerates in its motion and its momentum increases (F_net = dp/dt).
Submit Your Answer
We prioritize human answers over AI answers.
If you are human, and you can answer this question, please submit your answer.