Force equals mass times acceleration; so acceleration equals force divided by mass.
12 newtons divided by 2 kilograms equals 6 metres per second per second.
(newtons are (kilogram times metre) divided by seconds squared)
6 m/s
The force required to accelerate an object depends on the object's mass. Newton's second law states that Force = Mass * Acceleration. Re-written to solve for acceleration, this becomes Acceleration = Force/Mass. Basically, this means that the more mass an object has, the more force is required to accelerate it. Also, the faster you want to accelerate the object, the more force you will need.
-Reduce the object's mass. -Increase the force applied to the object
This depends on in which direction the force is being applied. If the force is applied against the direction of movement, it will slow a body down If the force is applied in the same direction of movement then it will cause the body to accelerate. If the force is applied in a direction at angle to the motion, the force can either cause the object to slow down or accelerate depending on the angle.
The object accelerates.
F = ma, so if mass is constant, you need to double the force to double the acceleration. The answer is 20 N.
Accelerate, motion is generated by applying force to mass.
Whenna given force is applied ,an oobject with greater mass will accelerate less
It depends on how long the force is applied for.
Force = mass x accelerationN = kg x accelerationacceleration = N/kg = 1 meter per second per second
Force = mass times acceleration, so the smaller mass will accelerate more.
There is no such object. Any object on which a force is applied will accelerate (i.e., its velocity will change over time). If the object has a very large mass, the effect will be hardly noticeable for any given force.
Accelerate. Using Newton's second law, Net Force = mass * acceleration rearranged the equation acceleration = Net Force/mass so when the force is non zero and the mass is non zero, the object will accelerate. Note: This does not mean that the object is always at rest when the force is zero, it simply means the velocity is constant (when velocity =0, the object is at rest).
Force = Mass * Acceleration (F = m * a)Therefore, if the mass of an object is increased, then the force required to accelerate to a given velocity will be greater. If the mass is decreased, then the force required to accelerate that object to a given velocity will become smaller.
If a force is exerted on an object, it will accelerate in inverse proportion to its mass in the direction of the force. For example, if two objects of different mass are subjected to the same force, the less massive object will accelerate more.
The force required to accelerate an object depends on the object's mass. Newton's second law states that Force = Mass * Acceleration. Re-written to solve for acceleration, this becomes Acceleration = Force/Mass. Basically, this means that the more mass an object has, the more force is required to accelerate it. Also, the faster you want to accelerate the object, the more force you will need.
An external force. Force = mass x acceleration
-- It takes more force to accelerate an object with more mass. ... Gravity exerts more force on an object with more mass. -- It takes less force to accelerate an object with less mass. ... Gravity exerts less force on an object with less mass. Whatever the mass of the object happens to be, gravity always exerts just the right amount of force to accelerate it at always the same rate ... 9.8 meters per second2.