Forces, acceleration and Newton's Laws - AQANewton's Third Law
Falling objects eventually reach terminal velocity - where their resultant force is zero. Stopping distances depend on speed, mass, road surface and reaction time.
According to Newton's Third Law of motion, whenever two objects interact, they exert equal and opposite forces on each other.
This is often worded as 'every action has an equal and opposite reaction'. However, it is important to remember that the forces act on two different objects at the same time.
Examples of force pairs
Newton's Third Law can be applied to examples of equilibrium situation.
Pushing a pram
There are contact forcesForce exerted between two objects when they are touching. between the person and the pram:
the person pushes the pram forwards
the pram pushes the person backwards
Car tyre on a road
There are contact forces between the tyre and the road:
the tyre pushes the road backwards
the road pushes the tyre forwards
A satellite in Earth orbit
There are non-contact forcesThe push or pull acting between objects that are not physically touching when they interact. gravitational forces between Earth and the satellite: