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acceleration times speed
The answer depends on the context: You can find the acceleration if you know any three of : initial velocity, final velocity, time, distance travelled. You can find it if you know the mass and force. You know the two masses and the distance between them (gravitational acceleration).
Distance = (1/2 of acceleration) x (time squared)You can change this around to solve it for acceleration or time.(Time squared) = (distance)/(half of acceleration)Time = the square root of [ (2 x distance)/(acceleration) ]Be careful . . .This is only true if the distance and the speed are both zero when the time begins.
To find the acceleration if the time is not given, you will need to know the velocity and the distance. Then, use this equation: d = vt + (1/2)at2 to solve the problem by plugging in your numbers for the distance and the velocity.
You can't you need the time and distance (once you have that it's just distance/time).
Without distance, you have to know time, initial velocity, and acceleration, in order to find final velocity.
Not enough information. One equation you can often use is Newton's Second Law: force = mass x acceleration Which, when solved for acceleration, gives you: acceleration = force / mass
The amount of time it would take an object to travel a distance with constant acceleration depends on its initial velocity, according to the equation: d = vit + 0.5at2 Where d is displacement, vi is initial velocity, t is time, and a is acceleration. Note: if the object starts from rest, its initial velocity, logically, is zero.
The equation that does involve time is.. v² = v₀² + 2ad
You cannot. Force is mass times acceleration. You have neither.
Acceleration= Distance divided by time
Acceleration in free fall is always the acceleration of gravity = 9.8 meters (32.2 feet) per second2