📚 Learning Guide
Classical Mechanics Principles
easy

Newton's First Law of Motion:Inertia : : ? : Equilibrium

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Learning Path
Learning Path

Question & Answer
1
Understand Question
2
Review Options
3
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4
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Choose the Best Answer

A

Acceleration

B

Velocity

C

Force

D

Mass

Understanding the Answer

Let's break down why this is correct

Answer

Newton’s First Law says that an object’s inertia keeps it moving or at rest unless a force acts on it. In the same way, equilibrium is the state reached when the total force on an object is zero. Thus the missing term that pairs with equilibrium is “force,” because force is what drives a system out of equilibrium. So the analogy reads: inertia : Newton’s First Law :: force : equilibrium. For example, a ball at rest stays still until someone pushes it; the ball’s inertia resists change, and the ball reaches equilibrium when the push (force) is balanced by friction.

Detailed Explanation

Force is what can disturb balance. Other options are incorrect because Acceleration is an effect, not the cause that breaks equilibrium; Velocity is a state of motion, not what disrupts equilibrium.

Key Concepts

Newton's Laws of Motion
Equilibrium in Mechanics
Inertia
Topic

Classical Mechanics Principles

Difficulty

easy level question

Cognitive Level

understand

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