Study resources
Physics — popular questions
Step-by-step Physics answers from Answer AI — curated questions, sorted newest first.
About this Physics catalog
Kinematics, dynamics, energy, waves, and electromagnetism problems with force-diagram-first walkthroughs.
Physics problems are usually solvable in one of five framings: kinematics, force balance, energy conservation, momentum conservation, or circuit analysis. The trick most introductory students miss is recognizing which framing is the lowest-effort path. Acemy's physics catalog tags each problem with its dominant framing and works through the free-body or energy diagram before the algebra, so you build the muscle of choosing the right approach rather than memorizing problem types.
Units are tracked through every line. Where SI is ambiguous (mass given in grams, distance in centimeters), the answer explicitly converts at the start instead of "plugging and praying." Force diagrams are described in text so you can sketch alongside; the variant problem always changes a sign or constraint that flips the dominant force, training you to redraw rather than reuse.
If your problem feels stuck, ask first: is energy conserved here? Is momentum conserved here? If yes to either, those are usually easier than kinematics. Use the topic links below to find a worked example in the same framing as yours. The Pitfall Guide on every detail page highlights the sign errors and reference-frame mistakes that account for most lost marks on physics tests.
Common topics
Quick questions
Why does the explanation start with a diagram?
Drawing the system forces you to declare your sign conventions and what counts as the system boundary. Skipping that step is the single biggest source of physics homework errors.
Are gravitational acceleration values consistent?
Yes — g = 9.81 m/s² unless the problem explicitly uses 10 m/s² for rounding. The answer states the value used at the top.
Showing 20 per page · 54 total · page 1 of 3
- 100%
Drawing forces for a car towing a caravan uphill
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Finding the ladder's sliding speed using related rates
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Using Boyle's law to find the rate of volume change
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Related rates for a filling spherical balloon
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Resultant force from a three-way tug-of-war vector diagram
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Finding wire tensions in a symmetric hanging traffic light
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Tugboat resultant force and equilibrant direction
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River crossing canoe velocity and landing point
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Convert 3.00 µm² Graphene Area to m²
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Bloodstain Height Calculation in Forensics
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Understanding friction in pushing, pulling, and rolling motion
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Vertical projectile motion with initial height and velocity
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Ampère's Law: Wedge Path Line Integral for Wire Current
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Solved: 12V Series-Parallel Resistor Circuit
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JEE Advanced 2016: Angular Momentum of Rolling Discs
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AP Physics C: Tension in Wires at Angle θ with Vertical
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Capacitor Voltage in Steady-State RC Circuit
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Hockey Scoring Angles: Position and Distance Effects
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Estimating capacitor energy from a small charge increase
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Net electric field at the center of a charged octagon