explain why fireman directs a powerfull stream of water on a fire from a hose pipe the hose pipe tads to go back ward
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hiiii,
hope this helps you
Very simply: An object(including water) in motion tends to continue that motion. A car too fast on a curve (for its weight and speed) will continue in a line away from the curve(centrifugal force) off the road. Water under great force and speed in a firehose behaves in the same way. Under pressure, it increases force and tends to straighten the hose it moves through; Laws of Physics explain this clearly; the greater the pressure of water in a hose, the more it wants to escape those confines to continue in a straight line, making it difficult to hold in one place. Try this with a garden hose, on full force.
hope this helps you
Very simply: An object(including water) in motion tends to continue that motion. A car too fast on a curve (for its weight and speed) will continue in a line away from the curve(centrifugal force) off the road. Water under great force and speed in a firehose behaves in the same way. Under pressure, it increases force and tends to straighten the hose it moves through; Laws of Physics explain this clearly; the greater the pressure of water in a hose, the more it wants to escape those confines to continue in a straight line, making it difficult to hold in one place. Try this with a garden hose, on full force.
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hey mate here is answer
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