No,because if the car is moving at a constant velocity that means the acceleration is zero. So the net force is zero and there may be some forces acting on it.
Only gravity, downward.
An object with balanced forces acting on it is still. An object with unbalanced forces acting on them moves at an non constant velocity. It is possible for an object to have balanced forces acting on it and yet move in a vacuum.
An object with balanced forces acting on it is still. An object with unbalanced forces acting on them moves at an non constant velocity. It is possible for an object to have balanced forces acting on it and yet move in a vacuum.
It can be in equilibrium if in constant motion (constant velocity) as no forces are acting on it (no acceleration)
When an object is moving at a constant velocity, the forces acting on it are balanced. This means that the net force on the object is zero, which allows it to continue moving at a constant speed in a straight line. The forces acting on the object may include friction, air resistance, and any applied forces.
The net force on an object moving at constant velocity would be zero. This is because the forces acting on the object are balanced, resulting in no acceleration or change in its velocity.
zero
It will have zero force BUT, it WILL have a constant velocity
When the forces acting on an object are balanced, the object will remain at rest or continue to move at a constant velocity in a straight line. This is known as equilibrium.
An object moves with constant velocity when there is no net force acting upon it. If there are no forces acting on an object, or if the forces acting on it "cancel out" leaving a net force of zero acting on the object, it will have zero acceleration. With a zero acceleration, the velocity of the object will be constant.
If anything is traveling at constant velocity, then the net force acting on it must be zero.+++Strictly, it is travelling at constant speed, not velocity, because you have not specified the directions of the train and the retarding forces acting on it.
Yes, frictional forces such as air, tires against the ground, gravity pulling the car down, force of engine moving car forward. The positive force of the engine turning the drive train and the wheels is equaled by the frictional forces; so overall forces balance out.
Yes...gravity