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."

Explanation: Newton's third law says the force one car exerts on the other is equal in magnitude and opposite in direction to the force the second car exerts on the first. Their resulting accelerations may differ if their masses differ, but the contact forces are equal and opposite.