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Kinetic forces - Coggle Diagram
Kinetic forces
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Linear kinetics
Force
A push or a pull can be used to describe force. However, while right, this is very simplistic, necessitating a deeper knowledge and definition.
The mechanical interaction between two items or bodies is known as force. It can act in close proximity (such as friction) or at a distance (such as gravity) (such as gravity). A force alters or attempts to alter the velocity of things.
Gravity
there is an attractive force, between objects which is related to their masses (the amount of material in them) and inversely proportional to the square of the distance between them.
This force causes the elliptical orbits of the planets around the sun, but also is
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Mass and weight
The amount of substance in a body or thing is measured in mass. It is commonly measured in kilograms, however it is not the same as its weight. The effect of gravity on mass is known as weight. This indicates that an object's mass is the same on the moon as it is on Earth, but its weight is less (due to the moon's lower gravity than the earth's). There is always a force operating vertically on us since the force of gravity works between an object and the earth and is directed towards the earth's center.
Newton´s laws of motion
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Second law: quantitative description of the changes that a force can produce on the motion of a body
It states that the time rate of change of the momentum of a body is equal in both magnitude and direction to the force imposed on it.
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Kinetics studies the forces at work when an item or body moves. We can look at linear kinetics for motions in a straight line or angular kinetics for movements about an axis, just as we do with kinematics.