When they meet they would say "Hi"
and then "Bye" almost right away.
..You say "meet" NOT "collide" NOT "hit" NOT "smash"..
So, they didn't have any contact to each other. Therefore, the unstoppable will just keep on moving pass the standing still one.
PS. That's for the case that these "unmovable" and "unstoppable" do exist.
2007-03-25 19:23:11
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answer #1
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answered by Tenny S 4
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There is no such thing as an unmovable object, and there is no such thing as an unstoppable object. Your question is like asking, ''What if red were to meet blue''? It simply cant happen. To be unstoppable and/ or unmovable an object would need an infinite amount off mass with some kinetic energy, or it would need an infinite amount of kinetic energy and some mass. These two situations are impossible.
2007-03-25 02:04:37
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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It depends on the mass of both objects, and the speed of the unstoppable object. If the unstoppable object is bigger and is going fast enough then I think the unmovable object would be knocked askew. If the unmovable object is bigger than the unstoppable object then I guess the unstoppable one would disintegrate upon impact. I am not a physics expert but that is my guess.
2007-03-24 17:07:02
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answer #3
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answered by Dana Katherine 4
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1: One object would fail, and not be unmovable/unstoppable any longer.
2: Both objects would fail.
3: The unstoppable object could get redirected, and continue moving somewhere other than towards the unmovable object.
2007-03-24 17:08:30
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answer #4
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answered by Dmitri 2
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Nothing is unmovable or unstoppable. But if they were maybe is would cause a rip in the space time continuum, The universe would collapse and cease to be except for the Millennium Falcon of course. Haha
2007-03-24 17:15:31
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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law of momentum can negate the probability of an unstoppable object, however if ur teacher said so, the moving object regardless of its mass will change its direction of movement and if the moving object has a high mass at very fast velocity it may deform the unmovable object molecularly
2007-03-24 17:46:53
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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Nothing, as they can never meet. If there were to be an unmovable object then there could not be an unstoppable force, and vice-versa. They are mutually exclusive and can therefore not coexist.
2007-03-24 17:08:32
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answer #7
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answered by Daniel M 2
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Newton's 2nd Law of Motion-
For every Action, there is an equal and opposite reaction
the unstoppable object would continue in a rotation, so its not "stopped", but its not to say it is "moving"...
OR
the unstoppable object would be redirected and not "stop"
2007-03-24 17:46:31
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answer #8
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answered by CarlosTheRed 3
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Well, I saw a woman drive her car (unstoppable) right into a boulder (unmovable).
Put it this way - she was hurting real bad and the car was totaled. She's lucky she had an airbag that worked.
2007-03-24 17:08:40
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answer #9
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answered by T Time 6
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At a subatomic level, the atoms of the movable object, would begin to merge into the unmovable object's particles, they would exchange ONLY at a subatomic level, until the moving object passed through. Therefore, the unmovable object wouldn't move, it would just allow the subatomic particles of the moving object to orbit when out of phase with it's own.
2007-03-24 17:06:34
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answer #10
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answered by LD 4
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