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Acceleration increases as force increases.
When mass increases, the force increases (f=ma) and the acceleration decreases (a=F/m).
An object's acceleration is the result of a force being applied to it. When that happens, the magnitude of the resulting acceleration is equal to the force divided by the object's mass, and the direction of the acceleration is in the direction of the force.
the cceleration of the object because the second the of newton explains the relation between force and acceleration and the two happen to bne directly proportional so if the acceleration increases so does the force or vice verca.
The acceleration is multiplied by four. a = F/m
Acceleration increases as force increases.
If the mass of an object increases, what happens to the acceleration?
The acceleration increases.
The acceleration of the object increases.
its acceleration will be increased
Acceleration is a net force that is inversely dependent on mass, therefore if an object's mass decreases, acceleration increases.
It is the velocity that increases.
When mass increases, the force increases (f=ma) and the acceleration decreases (a=F/m).
If you increase the force on an object acceleration increases . As F = m*a, where F = Force , m = mass of the object & a = acceleration
If you increase the force on an object acceleration increases . As F = m*a, where F = Force , m = mass of the object & a = acceleration
If the mass of an object increases, what happens to the acceleration?
F = M A Acceleration is directly proportional to force. When force applied to an object is reduced to one third, the object's acceleration is reduced to one third.