Newton's Third Law of Motion
Monica Caro 2nd block 4-28-15
Newton's Third Law Example
- When the bird is flying it's in motion, the bird files in the sky and it is use it's wings. The wings of the bird is pushing air downwards; so the force of the result comes from the mutual interactions; so the air must be pushing the bird upwards. The size of the force on the air equals the size of the force on the bird; direction of the force on the air going (downwards) is opposite from the direction of the force on going the bird (upwards).
Newton's Third law
- When one object exerts a force on the second object, the second object exerts on the force of the equal in the size and opposite in the direction on the first object. The action and reaction are forces that are applied to different objects. The action and reaction forces are pairs that are present in even when there is no motion on the objects.
Newton's Third Law: Action/Reaction
- For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction. The size of the forces on the first object is equal to the size of the force on the second object. The direction of the first object are opposite directions of the second object. The forces will always come in equal pairs and opposite action reaction of the forces of the pairs.
Newton's 3rd Law of Motion