Balancing forces are when two or more forces work together to keep something still or moving at a steady speed.
Imagine you're on a seesaw at the playground. When you and your friend sit on either end, if you both weigh the same, the seesaw stays level, neither of you goes up or down. That’s because the force from you and the force from your friend are balanced.
Like a Push-Pull Game
Think of it like playing tug-of-war with two teams. If both teams pull equally hard, the rope doesn’t move, that's balance! But if one team pulls harder, they start to win, and the rope moves toward them.
Balancing forces work this way too: if the forces are equal, things stay still or keep moving in a straight line without changing speed. If the forces aren't equal, things move, like when you jump off the seesaw and your friend goes flying up!
Examples
- A seesaw stays level when two kids of equal weight sit on either end.
- A car moving at constant speed has forces pushing forward and backward that cancel each other out.
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See also
- What is collision?
- What are tension forces?
- How do magnets attract or repel each other without touching?
- How do magnets attract or repel objects?
- What is mechanics?