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To calculate the acceleration of gravity, time (t) an object falling a certain distance (d) and the acceleration of gravity= d/t
The answer would be 80kg/ms or 80N because: force= mass x acceleration = 20kg x 4ms =80kg/ms =80N
how do you calculate the acceleration of a moving object.
khanacademy.org
you can caculate the acceleration of a commercial airplane when the airplane slows down
If the lift is in free fall, any riders will feel "weightless". Uniform downward acceleration will *only* produce "weightlessness" if the acceleration is equal to the acceleration due to gravity (id est, acceleration in free fall).
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To calculate the acceleration of gravity, time (t) an object falling a certain distance (d) and the acceleration of gravity= d/t
No. That's only one of several possibilities. -- with initial velocity, distance, and time, you can calculate acceleration -- with final velocity, distance, and time, you can calculate acceleration -- with force and mass, you can calculate acceleration -- with initial and final momentum, you can calculate acceleration -- with initial and final kinetic energy, you can calculate acceleration -- with mass, velocity at either end, and kinetic energy at the other end, you can calculate acceleration And I'm sure there are several more that I've missed.
The answer would be 80kg/ms or 80N because: force= mass x acceleration = 20kg x 4ms =80kg/ms =80N
how do you calculate the acceleration of a moving object.
khanacademy.org
Acceleration = (change in speed) divided by (time interval)
you can caculate the acceleration of a commercial airplane when the airplane slows down
Average acceleration = Change in speed/time so Time = Change in speed/Average acceleration
The basic definition of acceleration is (change of velocity) divide by time. Depending on the data you have, you can directly use this basic definition to calculate acceleration.
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