If the object were on earth it would travel 9.8 m/s^2.
If it is applied equally to all points, then the effect is to accelerate the body according to F = M * a. If it's not homogenous, then it may also cause a rotation.
No. To have an acceleration, you need a non-zero NET FORCE. That is, the sum of all objects acting on the box must not be equal to zero.
Heavier than air objects accelerate downwards. Lighter than air objects accelerate upwards until they are no lighter than the air around them.
If there is zero net force on an object, the object will not accelerate. (It's velocity will not change.)
Not all forces can cause an acceleration. In a perfect world, newton's law of F = M*A holds true, but in our world, it is easy to have a force without a resulting acceleration. If you were to poke a 100lb weight, would it move? probably not, because friction would cancel out the force on the weight. since you receive the third law reaction force, any acceleration that would hypothetically happen to the Earth is also canceled out
All objects accelerate if the forces acting on them are not balanced.
Objects will accelerate if there is a net force acting on them.
Gravity causes falling objects to accelerate.
Do nothing. (The objects will not accelerate).
than no one would move. nothing would move. you need to accelerate even the smallest amount to be in motion.
Depens on the amount of gravity. On Earth, they accelerate at about 9.8 meters per square second.
no, most objects accelerate differently.
The rate is 9.8m/sec
No
He would wildly accelerate his car when the traffic light turned green. Gravity causes falling objects to accelerate as they move toward the Earth. Living in a foreign country can accelerate the speed at which you learn the native language.
The force of gravity pulls down on all objects here on earth. If objects are allowed to fall, they accelerate downwards.
When the forces on an object are unbalanced, the object will accelerate in the direction of the net force.