No. Acceleration is proportional to the applied force.
No. Acceleration IS a change of velocity - any change. When velocity increases, there IS acceleration. The acceleration itself may be increasing, decreasing, or remain constant.
No, distance does not affect the body's acceleration when moving in a straight line with constant acceleration. The acceleration of an object depends only on the force acting on it, not the distance it travels. The acceleration will remain constant unless a different force is applied.
Acceleration is any change in velocity. Velocity is made up of a magnitude (the speed), and a direction. Velocity can change if the speed increases, if it decreases, or if the direction changes. For example, when a car goes around a curve, you feel the force of the acceleration.
If mass increases and there is no friction, the acceleration of an object on an inclined plane would remain constant, assuming the incline angle and applied force remain the same. The acceleration is determined by the net force acting on the object, which in this case is equal to the component of the gravitational force parallel to the incline.
The cart's acceleration will be directly proportional to the net force applied to it. If the force remains constant, the acceleration will also remain constant, assuming no other external factors are affecting the cart's motion.
The magnitude of the velocity will be constant however the direction will be constantly changing. The acceleration will remain constant towards the centre of the circle
The acceleration due to gravity remains constant, regardless of incline. The fact that it is on an incline does not change the fact that it will remain constant, it will only change the component of that acceleration being applied to the ball.
Acceleration increases
No. Gravitational Acceleration is a constant and is a function of mass. The effects of the constant upon another mass can be altered but the acceleration itself will remain the same.
If an object travels with constant acceleration, its speed will change at a constant rate over time. The object's speed will increase if the acceleration is positive, decrease if it is negative, and remain constant if the acceleration is zero.
When an object increases in speed, the acceleration vector remains in the direction of the object's motion. If the object is accelerating uniformly, the acceleration vector will remain constant in magnitude and direction. If the acceleration is not constant, the vector will change accordingly.
Both mass and acceleration will remain constant but speed will increase. Its explained in Newtons second law, in short: F=m*a