Physics, asked by armeeshmanzoor, 4 months ago

why a fast moving car slips while turning around a sharp curve?​

Answers

Answered by sanjana8350
0

Answer:

What the person is actually feeling is a direct result of the 2nd part of Newton's 1st Law, meaning that an object in motion will continue in that path unless acted upon by an external unbalanced force. So, when a person is traveling around a circle, their body wants to continue in a straight line.

Answered by vcastelino77
0

Answer:

due to frictional force

Explanation:

Any force or combination of forces can cause a centripetal or radial acceleration. Just a few examples are the tension in the rope on a tether ball, the force of Earth’s gravity on the Moon, friction between roller skates and a rink floor, a banked roadway’s force on a car, and forces on the tube of a spinning centrifuge.

Any net force causing uniform circular motion is called a centripetal force. The direction of a centripetal force is toward the center of curvature, the same as the direction of centripetal acceleration. According to Newton’s second law of motion, net force is mass times acceleration: net F = ma. For uniform circular motion, the acceleration is the centripetal acceleration—a = ac. Thus, the magnitude of centripetal force Fc is Fc = mac.

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