3.7 m/s2
gravity
Only in its magnitude ... about 38% of its magnitude on Earth.
Mercury's surface gravitational field strength is 0.38 times the Earth's.
The direction of the acceleration is towards the center. The magnitude of the acceleration is v2/r.
No. Slope of position/time graph is speed, or magnitude of velocity.Slope of speed/time graph is magnitude of acceleration.
The magnitude of acceleration depends on the gravitational pull from the planet. The amount of gravitational pull depends on the size and mass of the planet. On Earth gravity will produce an acceleration of 9.8 meters per second squared if there was no atmosphere.
Gravitational acceleration is simply acceleration due to gravity.
magnitude of acceleration=change of velocity/time invertal
No. "Pull" is a force, not an acceleration.
-- The magnitude of acceleration is equal to the time rate of change of speed. -- The magnitude of acceleration is equal to the time rate of change of the magnitude of velocity. -- Acceleration and velocity are both vectors.
The magnitude of gravitational force between two objects is directly proportional to the product of their masses. This means that as the mass of one or both objects increases, the magnitude of the gravitational force between them also increases. In simpler terms, the more massive an object is, the stronger its gravitational pull.
-- Acceleration of gravity on the moon =(universal gravitational constant) x (moon's mass)/(moon's radius)2-- Gravitational force on any object sitting on the moon's surface =(Acceleration of gravity on the moon) x (mass of the object)-- Universal gravitational constant = 6.67 x 10-11 newton-meter2/kilogram2
yes, Acceleration is vector quatity!!. Its has both magnitude and direction
If it is gravitational acceleration then it it is positive in downward and negative in upward direction..if it is not gravitational acceleration then it is depending upon the value of acceleration.
gravity
Zero is.
Not at all. However Gravity can impart an acceleration - Gravitational acceleration.