Answer:
heymelissa its amanda i hate ms spearman
Explanation:
yuh
Answer: An object undergoing uniform circular motion is moving
Explanation:
So Neon ( Ne) is the correct answer.
The answer is no. If you are dealing with a conservative force and the object begins and ends at the same potential then the work is zero, regardless of the distance travelled. This can be shown using the work-energy theorem which states that the work done by a force is equal to the change in kinetic energy of the object.
W=KEf−KEi
An example of this would be a mass moving on a frictionless curved track under the force of gravity.
The work done by the force of gravity in moving the objects in both case A and B is the same (=0, since the object begins and ends with zero velocity) but the object travels a much greater distance in case B, even though the force is constant in both cases.
Just do energy spent divided by time to get your answer :). With this we can say a human might be able to!