The first law says that things keep moving (or stay still) unless something else pushes or pulls them.
Imagine you're on a swing. When you’re swinging, you keep going back and forth, even when no one is pushing you anymore. But if the swing stops, it’s because something like friction (like air or the chain rubbing) slows you down. That's the law of inertia in action!
What Inertia Means
How It Works in Real Life
Think about riding in a car. When the car stops suddenly, you feel like you’re being pushed forward. That’s because your body wanted to keep moving at the same speed as the car, but the car stopped first!
So, the first law of motion is all about how things behave when nothing else is touching them, just like how you keep swinging or slide off a couch if it moves suddenly!
Examples
- A skateboard keeps rolling until you stop pushing it.
- You feel pushed back when the car suddenly stops.
- A ball rolls straight on a flat surface unless something gets in its way.
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See also
- What is Newton’s First Law of Motion?
- What is Kepler’s laws of planetary motion?
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