[Physics] Car physics Braking and Accelerating

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Why does a car nose up when accelerating and nose down when braking. and when i try to move in reverse with the handbrake on the car rear move up ?enter image description here

Best Answer

This results from torque, $\boldsymbol{\tau} = \mathbf{r} \times \mathbf{F}$. In the braking case, the torque is out of the screen because the moment arm, $\mathbf{r}$, is generally downward and the force (i.e., between tire and road), $\mathbf{F}$, is generally directed toward the back of the car (e.g., see example diagram below). In the acceleration case, the force is directed toward the front of the car and $\mathbf{r}$ is the same. force diagram examples

The direction of torque defines the axis about which the object experiencing the torque will rotate (in a right-handed sense). So in the braking(accelerating) case, the car will want to rotate in a counterclockwise(clockwise) sense.