The action and reaction forces referred to in Newton's third law are <u>opposite in direction and act upon different objects.</u>
In science, more specifically in the science classical mechanics, Newton's laws are principles that show the forces that act upon objects in motion. The first law speaks of momentum, the second of acceleration, and the third law states that for every action, there is an<u> equal and yet opposite </u>reaction.
Newton's third law may be confusing at first glance, but what it means is that the action and reaction forces are opposite in direction and act upon different objects, meaning that when one object applies force to another, the second will in-turn apply the same force back, whichever object is most resistant to these forces will be the one that moves the other.
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The answer is letter C. That spontaneous generation didn't happe
Rudolf Virchow tried to prove that whatever cells existed had to come from pre-existing ones.
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