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Forces and their interactions GapFill

Target Level
4-5
Running Total
0
0%
Attempt
1 of 3

You must fill all the gaps before clicking ‘Check Answers!’

All measurements can be categorised as either  vectorsspinorsfunctorsscalars (which have size but not direction) or  scalarsvectorsfunctorsspinors (which have both size and direction), which include forces.
Forces can be categorised as contact or non-contact forces, depending on whether they require contact between bodies to act, or whether they act at a distance. Examples of contact forces include  friction, air resistance and magnetic forcefriction, air resistance and tensionenergy, power and workfriction, tension and weight, and examples of non-contact forces include  friction, tension and weightgravitational, electrostatic and magnetic forcesenergy, power and workfriction, air resistance and magnetic force.
Gravity is the attraction of objects to each other; it's responsible for a wide variety of effects, from making sure you stay on the ground to controlling the orbits of planets around the Sun.  WeightMassInertiaNewton is the name given to the gravitational attraction between an object and a planet (usually Earth), which acts from a point on an object known as its  centre of masscentre of newton centre of inertiacentre of weight, and can be measured using a device called a  inertiameterforcemeterweightmeternewtonmeter.
Whenever a force changes a system, work is done. The work done by a force is equivalent to  the power ofthe efficiency ofthe energy transferred bythe rate of change of the force.
Forces can result in objects changing shape, known as deformation, which can be either stretching, bending or compressing the object. When the relationship between the force exerted on an object and the change in the object's shape is linear (produces a straight line graph), there is  efficientelasticinefficientinelastic deformation. After a point known as the  limit of powerlimit of resistancelimit of proportionalitylimit of linearity, less force is required to produce an extension of the same size, so the relationship is not linear; this is known as  elasticefficientinefficientinelastic deformation.

This is your 1st attempt! You get 3 marks for each one you get right. Good luck!

Pass Mark
72%