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Which of the following is not used to reduce friction?

Which of the following is not used to reduce friction?. wheels ball bearings oil rough surfaces. Which of the following is not a fluid?. air Sugar Water oil. When forces are balanced, the motion of the object. is decreased. is increased. does not change. is completely stopped.

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Which of the following is not used to reduce friction?

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  1. Which of the following is not used to reduce friction? • wheels • ball bearings • oil • rough surfaces

  2. Which of the following is not a fluid? • air • Sugar • Water • oil

  3. When forces are balanced, the motion of the object • is decreased. • is increased. • does not change. • is completely stopped.

  4. For every action, the reaction is • equal and in the same direction. • equal and opposite. • unequal and opposite. • unequal and in the same direction.

  5. Near the surface of the Earth, the acceleration due to gravity is 9.8 m/sec/sec. After falling 6 sec, an object would have a velocity of • 3.8 m/sec. • 9.8 m/sec • 15.8 m/sec. • 58.8 m/sec.

  6. Acceleration is produced when a force acts on a mass is described by Newton’s • first law of motion. • second law of motion. • third law of motion. • law of universal gravitation.

  7. The weight of an object varies with the • pull of gravity. • volume of the object. • dimensions of the object. • speed of the object.

  8. Forces can cause objects to • stop moving only. • change direction only. • start moving only. • start moving, change direction, or stop moving.

  9. A force that sets an object into motion is • balanced. • friction. • unbalanced. • inertia.

  10. Wheels and ball bearings change sliding friction to • static friction. • rolling friction. • fluid friction • all types of friction.

  11. The function of lubricants is to change • fluid friction to sliding friction. • fluid friction to rolling friction. • sliding friction to fluid friction. • sliding friction to rolling friction.

  12. Treads on tires • increase friction. • reduce friction. • decrease stopping motion. • prevent the braking of a car.

  13. An example of rolling friction is • a stack of cartons being pushed across a floor. • the use of ball bearings. • the fall of a feather through the air. • sand placed on an icy walk.

  14. An example of friction other than sliding or rolling is • pushing a desk across a floor. • walking across a floor. • floating downward after diving off a cliff. • riding on a skateboard.

  15. The sum of balanced forces equals • zero. • one. • two. • three.

  16. The head of the arrow representing a force indicates the A. size of the force. • strength of the force. • direction of the force. • sum of the forces.

  17. A standoff in an arm-wrestling match is due to • sliding frictional forces. • rolling frictional forces • fluid frictional forces. • balanced forces.

  18. The combination of two forces exerted in opposite directions is the • sum of the two forces. • difference between the two forces. • product of the two forces. • ratio of the two forces.

  19. If there is an unbalanced force in an arm-wrestling match, • both arms will move in the direction of the smaller force. • both arms will move in the direction of the larger force. • the arms will move in opposite directions. • the arms will be stationary.

  20. The first law of motion states • that an object at rest will remain at rest. • that an object in motion will remain in motion at a constant velocity. • that an unbalanced force can change the velocity of an object in motion. • all of the above.

  21. The law of motion that describes action-reaction is the • first law. • second law. • third law. • law of gravity.

  22. Gravitational force between two objects depends on the • masses of the objects and the distance between them. • mass of each object only. • distance between the objects only. • inertia and masses of the objects.

  23. A mass of 5 kg has a weight of • 5 kg m/sec/sec. • 5 N. • 49 kg m/sec. • 49 N.

  24. If you were on the moon, there would be a change in your • weight and mass. • weight. • mass. • volume.

  25. A force • is a push or a pull. • gives energy to an object. • can cause an object to change its motion. • can do all of the above.

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