Force=mass*acceleration
force equals mass times acceleration
My bad, im asking why the formula isnt acceleration= force - mass
From the formula force = mass x acceleration, if there is more mass, there will be less acceleration. Assuming the force doesn't also change.From the formula force = mass x acceleration, if there is more mass, there will be less acceleration. Assuming the force doesn't also change.From the formula force = mass x acceleration, if there is more mass, there will be less acceleration. Assuming the force doesn't also change.From the formula force = mass x acceleration, if there is more mass, there will be less acceleration. Assuming the force doesn't also change.
force is Mass*acceleration
Force=mass x acceleration
To achieve more acceleration, you need more force.
The same as the relation between acceleration and any other force. Force = (mass) x (acceleration) If the force happens to be gravitational, then the acceleration is down, and the formula tells you the size of the acceleration. If the acceleration is down and there are no rocket engines strapped to the object, then it's a pretty safe bet that the force is gravitational, and the formula tells you the size of the force.
force = mass*acceleration
The formula for finding the force of an object is F = ma. The "F" stands for force, "m" stands for mass and "a" is for acceleration. Force is the product of mass and acceleration.
F = m AMultiply (mass) times (acceleration). The product is (force).
The formula of Newton's second law is F=ma, for force( F) equals the mass (m) times the acceleration (a).
net force/mass
Force equals mass times acceleration.