You searched for: “force
force
A pushing or pulling action that can make objects speed up or slow down, change direction, or change shape.
This entry is located in the following unit: Automobile or Related Car Terms (page 3)
Word Entries containing the term: “force
centripetal force
The force that is required to keep an object moving around a circular path.

It is directed towards the center of the circle. In the absence of this effect, the object would move in a straight line tangential to the circle or keep going in a straight line.

Cars need aid going around corners; so, objects tend to travel in straight lines unless centripetal force bends their motion around into a curve.

This entry is located in the following unit: Automobile or Related Car Terms (page 2)
Coriolis force, Coriolis effect
The force that causes winds, or any freely moving object or fluid, to deviate to the right in the Northern Hemisphere and to the left in the Southern Hemisphere, as a result of the earth's rotation.
This entry is located in the following units: Geography Terms + (page 4) Meteorology or Weather Terms + (page 3)
electromotive force (s) (noun), electromotive forces (pl)
The forces which move electric currents around circuits; for example, generators produce electromotive forces.
This entry is located in the following unit: Technical Science and Engineering (page 2)
tidal force
1. The minimum distance to which a large satellite can approach its primary body without being torn apart by tidal forces.

If the satellite and primary body are of similar composition, the theoretical limit is about two and a half times the radius of the larger body.

The rings of Saturn lie inside Saturn's Roche limit and may be the debris of a demolished moon.

The limit was first calculated by the French astronomer Édouard Roche (1820–83). Artificial satellites are too small to develop substantial tidal stresses.

2. The force arising from differences in the strength of gravity experienced over different parts of an object.

Such a force is responsible for the tides, and for the breakup of a body straying within the Roche limit of a planet.

When comets pass close to a massive body like the sun or Jupiter, they may break up due, at least in part, to the tidal forces encountered.

This entry is located in the following unit: Astronomy and related astronomical terms (page 26)
tour de force (s) (noun), tours de force (pl)
1. A magnificent feat or accomplishment: France won the World Cup in 2018 and winning it could be considered to be France's tour de force in the international soccer or European football tournament of that year!
2. Etymology: from French, "a significant feat of strength."
A feat of strength or artistic skill.
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This entry is located in the following unit: Words of French origin (page 10)