Physics, asked by gaddeyv, 7 months ago

4. Is it correct to say" with respect
to a passenger travelling in a
bus the Passenger travelling
in another bus in the same
direction with the same speed
at rest

Answers

Answered by riddhishpandey15054
10

Answer:

Good question.

It all depends on the frame of reference of the observer.

If the observer is in the bus, their frame of reference is the bus. Relative to them, you’re motionless, whether the bus is moving or not.

If the observer is standing by the side of the road and the bus is moving past them, their frame of reference is the road, and you’re in motion relative to them.

If the observer is in another bus, their frame of reference is the other bus - and depending on whether it is moving at the same speed as your bus or not, you might be in motion or relatively stationary.

Answered by dhavalbhattec07
23

Answer:

yes, we can but only relative to passengers.

Explanation:

As we know that, Motion is a relative concept,

if both passenger traveling with same speed in same direction then both are at rest relative to each other.

Similar questions
Math, 11 months ago