the action force is your foot when u strike the ball the reaction force is the ball being kicked
Answer this question… If the action force is a player kicking a Soccer ball then what is the reaction force?
Can you identify action-reaction pairs? Let's see... A soccer player kicks a ball. The action reaction pair for the kick is:
When you kick a soccer ball, your foot exerts a force forward on the ball. In return, the ball exerts an equal force backward on your foot, causing your foot to feel the impact. This is an example of Newton's third law of motion: for every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction.
The game of soccer does not operate under its own unique physics. The forces involved are all absorbed and/or balanced as physical principles require.
When catching a ball, the action force is the force applied by the ball on your hand. The reaction force is the equal and opposite force applied by your hand on the ball. These forces are part of Newton's Third Law of Motion.
When you catch a ball, the action force is the force applied by your hand on the ball to stop its motion. The reaction force is the force applied by the ball on your hand in the opposite direction, creating an equilibrium that allows you to catch the ball securely.
When someone kicks the soccer ball, Newton's third law of motion is in action. This is because the third law states that for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction, so when you kick the ball, the force is opposite and equal to when you kicked it with your foot. Also, the first law of motion is in action because the ball will keep moving until a force acts upon it (friction from the grass and gravity stops the ball !)
False!
Newton's Cradle. A soccer player kicking a soccer ball. Things like that. Hope this helped Ian
In softball, action-reaction forces come into play when a player throws a ball. As the player exerts force on the ball by releasing it, an equal and opposite force is exerted on the player in the opposite direction. This force helps propel the ball forward.
The equal action and reaction forces do not cancel each other out when one person hits a ball because they act on different objects. The force exerted by the person hitting the ball causes the ball to accelerate in the direction of the force, while the reaction force from the ball pushes back on the person, causing them to feel the impact of hitting the ball.