The person jogging with her dog demonstrated kinetic energy, which is the energy of motion. As the person moves and the dog runs alongside, both have kinetic energy that comes from their movement.
his potential energy from standing on the building turns to kenetic energy when he is falling
kinetic
That is not true.
A real life example of kinetic energy is something........ Sike!!!!!! A ball rolling down a hill, A person typing on a keyboard.
The most common form of chemical energy is from coal and petrochemicals like diesel. It is combined with oxygen at height temperatures to create heat energy or kenetic energy and secondly, electrical energy.
120
Jogging and walk on the tredmil
A fit person is Always jogging and doing jumping jacks lol :)
Yes, two people can be moving at different speeds but have the same kinetic energy if their masses are inversely proportional to the square of their speeds. This means that one person could be moving faster but have less mass, while the other person moves slower but has more mass, resulting in the same kinetic energy for both.
your question is unanswerable in that no heart rate indicates jogging. what you need to do is take a resting heart rate then start jogging until you get to a target heart rate, like 100 or 120 or whatever is appropriate for your age.
A moving car A swinging pendulum Running water in a river A rolling ball Wind blowing through a field a bouncing basketball A spinning top A person running A flying bird A moving train