true
True
yes, the boat is traveling at the same speed as the passengers. when the boat accelerates or decelerates the passengers accelerate or decelerate as well. EX: If a boat that is going 50mph suddenly crashes into a cliff sideand stops short the passengers are still traveling at 50mph which is why they will fly forward to there deaths
There is no such thing as "force of inertia". The passengers are thrown forward, maintaining their initial motion. This is an application of Newton's First Law, which states that an object in motion stays in motion unless acted upon a force. The force of the car brake is acted upon the car and not on the passengers. This is why the passengers continue to move forward for a second when the car stops.
Inertia affects passengers on a bus when it starts suddenly by giving them a jolt and causing the passengers to move forward or backward depending on the buses position.
There should be a finger strap about where the passengers right shoulder would be. Pull forward and the seat should disengage and fold forward.
When car was moving, passengers were also moving. When car suddenly stops, the moving passengers try to maintain their state of forward motion because of their inertia. so they move forward relative to their seats...
in the beginning
FW: = forward, or forwarded
Because Michael Jackson wants you too....... >:)
When the bus driver applies brakes suddenly, the passengers move forward on account of inertia.
Actually you are thrown forward.
The Law of Inertia states that an object in motion remains in motion and an object at rest remains at rest unless and unbalanced, outside force acts upon that object. Because the passengers are "attached" to the bus, they have the same inertia as the bus. But because the passengers are technically seperated, they have their own inertia. So when the bus is slowing down to a stop, the passengers inertia are to keep moving forward. As the bus moves back, the passengers want to keep moving forward. Which is why they lurch forward as the bus decelerates.
on the frame rail underneath the passengers side just forward of the rear tire.