15 Real World Examples of Newton’s Third Law

There are many everyday examples of Newton’s Third Law which states equal and opposite forces are generated in interactions between objects. A few clear examples are pulling a wagon exerts a forward force on the handle just as it pulls back on your grip, hitting a baseball causes the bat to recoil backward as it launches the ball forward, and standing exerts a downward force on the ground which pushes your body upwards with equal strength.

The rowing of a boat, the bounce of a ball, and the recoil of a gun also demonstrate this principle of equal and opposite reaction forces that is summarized by Newton’s Third Law of Motion.

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Examples of Newton’s Third Law

Here are a few Examples of Newton’s Third Law:

1. Rowing a Boat

When rowing a boat, the oars push against the water and the water pushes the oars back, propelling the boat forward. This demonstrates Newton’s Third Law because the force the rower exerts on the water results in an equal but opposite force from the water on the oars.

image showing one of the most common Examples of Newton's Third Law

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Professional rowers can produce about 700 watts of power during a race.

2. Bouncing a Ball

When a ball bounces off the ground, it exerts a downward force and the ground pushes up on it with an equal amount of force, sending it back into the air. This reaction force from the ground is required by Newton’s Third Law.

image showing Bouncing a Ball as an Example of Newtons Third Law

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A professional NBA basketball can be bounced over 10 feet high off the hardwood court.

3. Recoil of a Gun

The recoil of a gun is a straightforward example of Newton’s Third Law. As the gun fires forward, the body of the gun kicks backward with equal force so total momentum is conserved.

image showing Recoil of a Gun as an Example of Newtons Third Law

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Firing a large caliber rifle can create a recoil force of over 100 pounds.

4. Rocket Launch

As hot gases are ejected down from the base of a rocket, the rocket receives an equal upward push propelling it into space. The plume of gases pushes on the rocket in one direction, and the rocket pushes back on those gases in the opposite direction.

image showing Rocket Launch as an Example of Newtons Third Law

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The Saturn V rocket produced 34.8 million newtons of thrust to lift Apollo spacecrafts to the Moon.

5. Pulling a Wagon

As you pull forward on a wagon or other object with a rope, the wagon pulls backward on the rope with an equal force. The wagon moves as you overcome friction and transfer momentum through the rope.

image showing Pulling a Wagon as an Example of Newtons Third Law

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The largest wagon trains in the 1800s had over 100 wagons pulled by oxen teams.

6. Swinging a Bat

As a batter swings the bat forward to hit a pitch, the bat exerts a force forward on the ball, and the ball exerts an equal force backward on the bat, sending the ball flying forward.

image showing Swinging a Bat as an Example of Newtons Third Law

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A home run swing can apply over 1000 pounds of force in less than a second.

7. Jumping

When jumping, a person pushes down against the ground, and the ground pushes up on the person with an equal and opposite force, propelling them upwards. This reaction force enables jumping.

image showing Jumping as an Example of Newtons Third Law

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The highest basketball dunk reached 12 feet 6 inches upwards.

8. Crashing Toy Cars

When two toy cars collide, they both feel an impact that causes the cars to bounce backward. This demonstrates both cars exert equal force on each other, as required by Newton’s Third Law for the reaction forces to balance.

image showing Crashing Toy Cars as an Example of Newtons Third Law

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Bumper cars carry their entire electric supply onboard and have no external wires while driving.

9. Firing a Slingshot

As the slingshot fires, the band pushes forward on the projectile, and the projectile exerts an equal and opposite backward force on the band, propelling the projectile forward at high speeds.

image showing Firing a Slingshot as an Example of Newtons Third Law

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Ancient slingshot warriors could hit targets at distances over 400 yards.

10. Pressing Against a Wall

Unlike resting on a wall, when actively pressing against a wall with your hands, the wall pushes back with equal force against your push. The wall exerts this equal and opposite force due to Newton’s Third Law.

image showing Pressing Against a Wall as an Example of Newtons Third Law

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The largest human-made walls like the Great Wall of China are over 20 feet tall to defend against invasions.

11. Hammering a Nail

As a hammer drives a nail into wood, the head of the hammer pushes the nail downward with a force and the nail pushes the hammer head upward with an equal reaction force, keeping overall momentum balanced.

image showing Hammering a Nail as an Example of Newtons Third Law

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In physics, this reaction force is used to mathematically calculate the acceleration achieved when hammering against resistance.

12. Shooting an Arrow

When shooting an arrow from a bow, the bowstring pushes forward on the arrow as the arrow exerts an equal and opposite backward force on the bowstring according to Newton’s Third Law, causing the arrow to release rapidly.

image showing Shooting an Arrow as an Example of Newtons Third Law

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Ancient archers could shoot arrows over 400 yards using recurve bows.

13. Roller Coasters

In roller coaster loops, the track supplies an inward centripetal force on riders as they move in circular motion, and riders push outward on the tracks with an equal but opposite force as required for equilibrium.

image showing Roller Coasters as an Example of Newtons Third Law

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Roller coasters can generate up to 6 G’s of acceleration on vertical loops, producing intense sensations.

14. Pushing Against Static Friction

When pushing a heavy object at rest, static friction pushes horizontally opposite your applied force. As the applied force overcomes the maximum static friction force, the crate begins to move.

image showing Pushing Against Static Friction as an Example of Newtons Third Law

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Coefficients of static friction between wood on wood can be over 0.5, meaning a normal force over 100 lbs results in over 50 lbs of friction.

15. Wind Power

In wind turbine design, the turbine blades push backwards on the wind flow turning a central rotor shaft. The wind pushes the blades forward with an equal reaction force that generates rotational power according to Newton’s Third Law.

image showing Wind Power as an Example of Newtons Third Law

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Large-scale wind turbines can be over 400 feet tall from ground to turbine tip at maximum vertical rotation angle.

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