It should not, unless u hit an obstruction in front of you.
My father was rear ended on a 2003 camry at around 60mph, resulting in a totalled car(flew 150 feet with breaks applied) and the cars entire rear was jammed halfway inside the car.
No airbags deployed.
LOGFOR
The size, speed, location and angle of impact of the object with the Earth. A major factor would be if the impact is on water or land.
We can't be entirely certain, but the Earth's axial tilt may be related to the massive collision with another (now extinct) planet; a collision in which the Moon coalesced from the debris. The same collision would certainly have affected the rate of spin of the pre-Earth.
It is FAR easier to change the direction of an asteroid than to blow it up. All that is needed to accomplish the former is to nudge the asteroid a little off its collision course with Earth, and this could be done with some small explosions on the side of that asteroid. Blowing up an asteroid would be a complete waste of energy.
The details depend on what you want to solve for. Quite often, in practice you would use the Law of Conservation of Momentum - just write an equation that states that the total momentum after a collision (for example) is the same as it was before the collision. This can often help you calculate things such as velocities.
No, that would be the catalytic converter that does that. The air bag is there so that in the event of a crash the car's passengers will not impact the sides of the vehicle - they deploy in the event of an collision.
Possibly a technical fault.
There are many reasons that the AIRBAG light come come on. The computer will need to be scanned to get the troubles codes. Trouble codes assist in diagnosis of what circuit has a problem. I would suggest getting that done as soon as possible, because an AIBAG light on may mean that the airbags will not deploy in a collision. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
typically 5 mph +
your car could have been hit by a freight train in the rear and the airbags would not deploy unless, of course, you hit something in the front after the rear end collision had already occurred. the sensors are in the front and are designed to deploy the srs units if the occupants are in danger of going forward not backwards as the case in a rear end collision.
There is not much chance that your airbag would malfunction and just deploy, but if the airbag light is on there is a 100% chance that it will not operate properly in the event of an accident. You need to have the car inspected at a dealer or certified repair shop if the airbag light is on and remains on.
Check under recalls.There may have been a recall on this problem. The airbag controller has detected a problem. The airbags or an airbag may not deploy when called upon.
Yes, an airbag will deploy at any speed. HOWEVER, it will not deploy upon just any impact, there are sensors on the vehicle that determine the force of impact, just how hard and blunt the impact was, if it is a small minimal force, then there will be no deployment, but if there was a hard impact/force, then obviously it would deploy.
You would need to be more specific because an airbag will not go off in every vehicle collision, there are enabling criteria that prevent that from happening if the airbag is not needed (i.e. like a minor fender bender) Some other information needed would be as follows: Approxamate MPH: Location of the impact: (i.e. T-bone collision or head on)
Yes, I hit a deer going 45-50 MPH...I would have thought the air bags would have deployed...the body shop said I was lucky they did not though.
One possibility could be, it was the Airbag sensor's 'threshold' was set to low from the manufacture.Another possibility, the sensor's 'threshold' had deteriorated over time due to environmental and/or driving conditions.
it depends if the car hit the same area as the impact sensor, as they can be set off with not that much force.