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Can an object be accelerating when its speed is zero?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Yes, of course an object which has zero velocity can be accelerating. If you throw a ball up into the air, it eventually stops instantaneously and then starts coming back down. At that same point (where it stops), it has an acceleration in the downward direction due to gravity. If it didn't, it would stay where it was suspended in mid air.
Acceleration is what causes a change in velocity.
Acceleration is what causes a change in velocity.
Precisely - since the question is scalar why introduce vectors? A body with zero velocity can still have quantifiable speed in scalar vernacular.
There may be many accelerating forces acting upon the body but if the net effect is no speed then, in scalar vernacular, that body is not accelerating for the entire time the speed remains zero.
There may be many accelerating forces acting upon the body but if the net effect is no speed then, in scalar vernacular, that body is not accelerating for the entire time the speed remains zero.
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