Question detail

In Forces and motion, which response best shows definition precision for Newton's laws of motion: distinguish Newton's third-law pairs from balanced forces acting on one object?

Try the question, check the answer, then read the explanation to understand the curriculum point.

At a glance

MCQ

Type

practice

Style

Topic

Forces and motion

Question

  1. A. Newton's laws of motion: Distinguish Newton's third-law pairs from balanced forces acting on one object ? use distinguish with definition precision.
  2. B. Newton's laws of motion: this confuses resultant force and balanced forces and misses the definition precision focus.
  3. C. Forces and motion: this gives a vague answer without applying distinguish.
  4. D. Newton's laws of motion: this uses the wrong force or motion condition for distinguish Newton's third-law pairs from balanced forces acting on one object.

Answer

The correct answer is: Newton's laws of motion: Distinguish Newton's third-law pairs from balanced forces acting on one object ? use distinguish with definition precision.

Explanation

The correct option is Newton's laws of motion: Distinguish Newton's third-law pairs from balanced forces acting on one object ? use distinguish with definition precision.. It is correct because it answers the approved objective to distinguish Newton's third-law pairs from balanced forces acting on one object in the specific subtopic Newton's laws of motion. The definition precision focus keeps resultant force and balanced forces distinct and uses the named force or motion idea instead of a generic Physics statement.

Common mistake

Confusing Third Law Pairs

Students often confuse Newton's third-law pairs with balanced forces acting on a single object, thinking they are the same.

To fix this, remember that third-law pairs involve two different objects exerting equal and opposite forces on each other, while balanced forces act on the same object and result in no change in motion.

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application MCQ 4: forces acting on one object. | Forces and… | ExamCompanion