Want this question answered?
Be notified when an answer is posted
Chat with our AI personalities
The force that brings a stretched rubber band back to its original shape is called elastic potential energy. As the rubber band stretches, the elastic potential energy increases. When released, this energy is converted back to kinetic energy, causing the rubber band to spring back into its original shape.
Yes, slime can stretch and return to its original shape due to its non-Newtonian properties. When applied force is removed, the slime will flow back into its original shape slowly.
A material that bounces back to its original shape after a force is removed is called resilient or elastic. Examples of such materials include rubber, certain types of plastics, and springs.
Metal when it gets hit, stays dented and looks terrible. Plastic either breaks or bounces back to original shape, thus defeating vandals' efforts. Plastics are probably cheaper to produ
Elastic can be stretched and then reverts back to its original shape.
A spring is an object that returns to its original shape after being stretched and is measured in force meters. When a spring is stretched or compressed, it exerts a force proportional to the distance it is stretched, making it a common force measuring tool.
When an object is stretched, the force that occurs is known as tension. Tension is a pulling force that acts on the object in the direction of the stretch, attempting to restore the object back to its original shape.
Elastic force is the force exerted by an elastic material when it is stretched or compressed. It is a restoring force that tries to bring the material back to its original shape or size. The amount of elastic force is proportional to the amount of deformation applied to the material.
Elastic is something that can be stretched but goes back to its original shape after.
A spring is a common component in force meters that returns to its original shape after being stretched. When a force is applied to the spring, it deforms but returns to its original position once the force is removed. This property makes springs ideal for measuring forces due to their consistent elasticity.
Three examples of elastic force are a stretched rubber band returning to its original shape when released, a compressed spring pushing back to its original length, and a stretched balloon contracting when the air inside is released.
A rubber band can be stretched to change shape but can go back to its original form when released.