F=ma. Greater mass leads to smaller acceleration given the same force.
Force is directly proportional to acceleration, so the greater the force, the greater the acceleration.
force and acceleration
The force acting upon the object as well as the mass of the object. Both will affect the acceleration of the object.
Not necessarily. Changing direction does affect the velocity, which is acceleration and direction combined.
That depends on the exact situation. If there is an interaction with other charges, this can cause the object to acceleration (basically, change its velocity), and the greater the object's charge, the faster its velocity will change.
Force is directly proportional to acceleration, so the greater the force, the greater the acceleration.
It reduces the acceleration of the falling object due to friction.
Yes. F/m=a mass is inverse to acceleration.
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No, different font colors in wordpad do not affect its speed when opening; however, the greater the number of colors used, the greater the file size will be and that will affect how long it takes to open the file.
It will increase the velocity of the the object in which the acceleration is applied.
The force acting upon the object as well as the mass of the object. Both will affect the acceleration of the object.
Acceleration does not effect gravity. It is rather the other way round. Gravity can affect the rate of acceleration.
No.
force and acceleration
The force acting upon the object as well as the mass of the object. Both will affect the acceleration of the object.
Acceleration is simply a measurement of how the speed is changing, over time.