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What is Newton's third law?

Learn about the fact that forces come in pairs.

What is Newton's third law?

You probably know that the Earth pulls down on you. What you might not realize is that you are also pulling up on the Earth. For example, if the Earth is pulling down on you with a gravitational force of 500 N, you are also pulling up on the Earth with a gravitational force of 500 N. This remarkable fact is a consequence of Newton's third law.
Newton's third law: If an object A exerts a force on object B, then object B must exert a force of equal magnitude and opposite direction back on object A.
This law represents a certain symmetry in nature: forces always occur in pairs, and one body cannot exert a force on another without experiencing a force itself. We sometimes refer to this law loosely as action-reaction, where the force exerted is the action and the force experienced as a consequence is the reaction.
We can readily see Newton’s third law at work by taking a look at how people move about. Consider a swimmer pushing off from the side of a pool, as illustrated below.
A swimmer pushes on the wall with her feet, which causes the wall to push back on her feet due to Newton's third law. Image credit: Adapted from Openstax College Physics
The swimmer pushes against the pool wall with her feet and accelerates in the direction opposite to that of her push. The wall has exerted an equal and opposite force back on the swimmer. You might think that two equal and opposite forces would cancel, but they do not because they act on different systems. In this case, there are two systems that we could investigate: the swimmer or the wall. If we select the swimmer to be the system of interest, as in the image below, then Fwall on feet is an external force on this system and affects its motion. The swimmer moves in the direction of Fwall on feet. In contrast, the force Ffeet on wall acts on the wall and not on our system of interest. Thus Ffeet on wall does not directly affect the motion of the system and does not cancel Fwall on feet. Note that the swimmer pushes in the direction opposite to that in which she wishes to move. The reaction to her push is thus in the desired direction.

What are other examples of Newton's third law?

Other examples of Newton’s third law are easy to find. As a professor paces in front of a whiteboard, she exerts a force backward on the floor. The floor exerts a reaction force forward on the professor that causes her to accelerate forward.
Similarly, a car accelerates because the ground pushes forward on the drive wheels in reaction to the drive wheels pushing backward on the ground. You can see evidence of the wheels pushing backward when tires spin on a gravel road and throw rocks backward.
In another example, rockets move forward by expelling gas backward at high velocity. This means the rocket exerts a large backward force on the gas in the rocket combustion chamber, and the gas therefore exerts a large reaction force forward on the rocket. This reaction force is called thrust. It is a common misconception that rockets propel themselves by pushing on the ground or on the air behind them. They actually work better in a vacuum, where they can more readily expel the exhaust gases.
Helicopters similarly create lift by pushing air down, thereby experiencing an upward reaction force. Birds and airplanes also fly by exerting force on air in a direction opposite to that of whatever force they need. For example, the wings of a bird force air downward and backward in order to get lift and forward motion.

What do examples involving Newton's third law look like?

Example 1: Fridge push

A person drives a cart, Cart 1, to the right while pushing another cart, Cart 2, that has a massive refrigerator on it. The total mass of Cart 2, cart plus fridge, is three times the total mass of Cart 1, cart plus person. If the person is driving with enough force that the two carts accelerate to the right, what can be said for sure about the magnitudes of the forces on the carts?
Choose 1 answer:

Example 2: Third-law-force pairs

A box sits at rest on a table as seen in the image below. Various forces are listed in the table below the image.
Drag the forces in the right column so that they're lined up with their Newton's third law partner force in the left column.
1

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  • duskpin seedling style avatar for user afzalsubhani
    For example, if a baseball ball is applying force on a ball of 1000N and ball moves away. If the ball is applying the same force on the bat why doesn't the bat moves away?
    (19 votes)
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    • blobby green style avatar for user robshowsides
      Great question. There are two factors to consider.
      First, the masses are different. The mass of a baseball is .145kg, while a bat has a mass of about 1.0 kg. So, from F = ma, this tells us that a = F/m, and so the acceleration of the ball will be about 7 times the acceleration of the bat. We know that the average acceleration is given by a = Δv/Δt, which tells us that Δv = a * Δt. Thus, since the Δt is the same for both, and the acceleration of the ball is 7 times bigger, the Δv of the ball will be 7 times bigger.
      The Second factor is that the bat is already moving with a fairly high speed, and so its momentum is much greater than the momentum of the ball, at least in the frame of reference of the spectators. Thus, the bat is only slowed down, while the ball is turned completely around. Here is an example:
      mass of bat = 1kg
      mass of ball = (1/7)kg
      initial velocity of bat = +35 m/s
      initial velocity of ball = -35 m/s
      final velocity of bat = +20 m/s
      final velocity of ball = +70 m/s
      You can see that the Δv for the bat = 20 - 35 = -15m/s, while Δv for the ball = 70 - -35 = +105m/s, which is 7 times as big as the Δv for the bat.

      If you were to watch the collision from a car moving at v = +35m/s, you would see the bat initially at rest and finally moving at -15 m/s, so you would see it "moving away" from the collision.

      One final factor is that the player keeps pushing on the bat during the hit, so although the ball pushes on the bat equal and opposite to the bat pushing on the ball, there is additional force on the bat that tends to counteract the ball pushing on the bat.
      (48 votes)
  • aqualine ultimate style avatar for user Sophie Scheight-Bhag
    how did newton figure out his third law?
    (24 votes)
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  • blobby green style avatar for user Ng ImChiew
    Assume that I drop a ball from the 2nd floor to the ground. Why is it that the ball could not bounce all the way back to my position if Newton's third law state that the ground will exert an equal amount of force to the ball?
    (15 votes)
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    • leaf orange style avatar for user Andrei Paraschiv
      Energy is lost every time the ball bounces because of the air friction. In a (hypothetical) perfect vacuum where nothing acts on the ball except for gravity, the ball would bounce all the way back to the 2nd floor every time, forever (or until stopped by an external force).
      (14 votes)
  • leaf blue style avatar for user hesjuli19
    How does one differentiate between an action force and a reaction force if they are both "reacting" to each other?
    (13 votes)
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  • starky ultimate style avatar for user 🦅🦅Uddipto Mandal💨
    Newton’s law states that if we apply force to an object, it will push back with the same amount of force in the opposite direction. So if I push a pen with 10 Newton it is supposed to push me back with 10 Newton too. And as the forces cancel out, the net displacement should be zero. Then how does the pen move?
    (5 votes)
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    • mr pink red style avatar for user andrewp18
      Forces can only cancel out on a single object. In this scenario you experience a force of 10 N in one direction and the pen experiences a separate force of 10 N in the opposite direction. The net force on the pen is 10 N. There is no reason to add the 10 N on you to the pen because those 10 N are being exerted on you, not the pen.
      (10 votes)
  • primosaur sapling style avatar for user mrdavidjriley
    what if two boxes equal is mass and force collided in space head on
    (1 vote)
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    • piceratops ultimate style avatar for user Phil Howlin
      The answer to this depends on how elastic the collision is, see Coefficient of restitution (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coefficient_of_restitution). If kinetic energy is conserved, they bounce back with equal speed. If the collision has loss (i.e. they make a noise, their surfaces heat, they plastically deform etc), they bounce back with lower speed.

      Think of 2 cars in a head on collision. They crumple and don't bounce much at all - an inelastic collision.

      Note that momentum is maintained in all collisions: 2 objects the same mass travelling equal speed along the same line in opposite directions have a sum of 0 momentum. For momentum to be conserved they must have equal speeds in opposing directions after the collision.
      (7 votes)
  • blobby green style avatar for user gray
    Why is lying in bed not an example of Newton's 3rd law? My text book says its because the forces acting on you come from a different interaction pair but doesn't explain further.
    (4 votes)
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    • male robot hal style avatar for user Andrew M
      When you lie on your bed, you push on the bed and the bed pushes on you. That's Newton's third law.
      At the same time, earth's gravitational force is pulling on you, and your gravitational force is pulling on earth. That's another example of 3rd law.
      Note that 3rd law pairs have to be of the same type. contact force and contact force, in the bed/you situation. Gravity and gravity in the earth/you situation.
      Now we can ask a different question: why are you stationary when you lie on your bed. That's because the contact force from the bed on you is equal to your weight. Here we have two different types of forces - the contact force and the gravitational force. The sum of those forces is zero, so you don't accelerate. That's Newton's 2nd law, F = ma.
      (5 votes)
  • leafers ultimate style avatar for user apurv.rajput19
    If a push a table, that means it will apply a reaction force on my my hand.If the table moves forward, shouldn't my hand move backwards due to the force applied by the table?
    (2 votes)
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  • aqualine tree style avatar for user neha.nagarkar
    "This law represents a certain symmetry in nature: Forces always occur in pairs, and one body cannot exert a force on another without experiencing a force itself. We sometimes refer to this law loosely as “action-reaction,” where the force exerted is the action and the force experienced as a consequence is the reaction." [ was seen in paragraph 3 ]
    QUESTION ; how do we know that forces always occur in pairs ? is it just due to Newton's third law ?
    (3 votes)
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    • leafers ultimate style avatar for user Diogo Ribeiro
      We can't know for sure, but we can be quite confident about it since but no one was able to disprove this theory up until now, with centuries of tries.
      Also you can prove that this law holds for the types of forces we already know: gravitational, electromagnetic, weak and strong. The only way it could be wrong would be finding out new types of forces.
      (6 votes)
  • starky ultimate style avatar for user Emma S.
    What would happen if Newton's Third Law didn't happen? Would a runner be able to run or would his force keep pushing at the ground with no result?
    (4 votes)
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