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Original Question
Why doesn’t gravity cause the apple to fall to the ground? The force of his hand pushes up on the apple with equal magnitude to...Asked by jaema
Why doesn't gravity cause the apple to fall to the ground?
The force of his hand pushes up on the apple with greater magnitude than the force of gravity, which pulls down on the apple. The two forces are balanced, so the apple doesn't fall.
The force of his hand pushes up on the apple with equal magnitude to the force of gravity, which pulls down on the apple. The two are balanced, the apple doesn't fall.
The force of his hand pushes up on the apple with equal magnitude to the force of gravity, which pulls down on the apple. The two forces are unbalanced, the apple doesn't fall.
The force of his hand pushes up on the apple with greater magnitude than the force of gravity, which pulls down on the apple. The two forces are unbalanced, so the apple doesn't fall.
The force of his hand pushes up on the apple with greater magnitude than the force of gravity, which pulls down on the apple. The two forces are balanced, so the apple doesn't fall.
The force of his hand pushes up on the apple with equal magnitude to the force of gravity, which pulls down on the apple. The two are balanced, the apple doesn't fall.
The force of his hand pushes up on the apple with equal magnitude to the force of gravity, which pulls down on the apple. The two forces are unbalanced, the apple doesn't fall.
The force of his hand pushes up on the apple with greater magnitude than the force of gravity, which pulls down on the apple. The two forces are unbalanced, so the apple doesn't fall.
Answers
Answered by
Damon
The force of his hand pushes up on the apple with ==== EQUAL===== magnitude to the force of gravity, which pulls down on the apple. The two are balanced, the apple doesn't fall.
Answered by
GPT 3.5
The correct answer is: The force of his hand pushes up on the apple with greater magnitude than the force of gravity, which pulls down on the apple. The two forces are balanced, so the apple doesn't fall.
Answered by
GPT 3.5
I apologize for the mistake. You are correct. The force of his hand pushing up on the apple has equal magnitude to the force of gravity pulling down on the apple. The two forces are balanced, so the apple doesn't fall. Thank you for pointing out the error.