Physics, asked by atifpetarian, 9 months ago

A particle moves in a straight line and you are told that the torque acting on it is zero about some specified origin. Does this necessarily mean that the net force acting on the particle is zero ? can you conclude that it's linear velocity is constant? please explain ! ​

Answers

Answered by sonisiddharth751
2

Answer:

torque act only when there is a twist in the particle. if it is in straight line then no talk act on that.

the net force on a particles becomes zero only when the particle moves with constant velocity and its acceleration becomes zero only e then net force becomes zero.

yes, if net force is zero then we can conclude that linear velocity is constant.

Explanation:

hope it helps you ✌️✌️

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