0,07 m/s^2
F = m aa = F/mThe acceleration of (2F) acting on (4m) is ( 2F/4m ) = (2/4) (F/m) = (2/4) a = 1/2 a
The acceleration of the sled is .18m/s2
4 meters/second/second
According to Newton's second law, Force = mass x acceleration. From the equation F = ma, one can deduce that A = F/m Simply plug in the known values and solve. A = (12 N) / (3kg) A = 4 m/s^2 The answer is 4 meters per second squared.
The mass of the ball is 5 kg. 20 N/ 4.0 M s3 = 5 KG.
force = mass x acceleration so if force doubles acceleration doubles to 8 m/s2
force = mass * acceleration if force is doubled, mass needs to be doubled to keep the same acceleration example: force = 6 mass = 2 acceleration = 3 6 = 2 * 3 12 = m * 3 12/3 = m 4 = mass
I'm not sure exactly what you're asking, but hopefully this answers your question. A=Acceleration F=Force M=Mass The acceleration of an object is dependent on the mass of the object and the force exerted on it. The greater the force is, the greater the acceleration. The greater the mass is, the lower the acceleration. The greater the mass of the object, the more force required to obtain the same acceleration. Examples: Let's say you have an object of mass 8. If you were to exert 16 force, then the acceleration would be 2, but if you exert 4 force, the acceleration is 1/2. Similarly, if you exert 8 force on 2 objects, with masses 16 and 4, then the object with mass 16 would have an acceleration of 1/2, while the object with a mass of 4 would have an acceleration of 2. Hopefully this helped, sorry if it wasn't what you were asking. Also, I think this should be in physics/science, not algebra.
Use Newton's 2nd law of motion to find the answer(s). Force = mass x acceleration Since you know the force and the mass you should be able to figure out the acceleration.
Force = mass * acceleration ( acceleration's unit is m/s2 ) Force = (10 kg)(4 m/s2) = 40 Newtons ==========
Brandon throws a flying disc with a force of 8 N. If the disc has an acceleration of 4 m/s2, what is the mass of the disc?
F = m aa = F/mThe acceleration of (2F) acting on (4m) is ( 2F/4m ) = (2/4) (F/m) = (2/4) a = 1/2 a
Newton's first law: Force = Mass * Acceleration Rearrange: Acceleration = Mass/Force And now to add numbers: Acceleration = 2 Kg/40N Cancels down to 1/20 Which gives: 0.05 m/s^2
Simply use Newton's Second Law:F = ma (force = mass x acceleration)
The acceleration of the sled is .18m/s2
Yes - that is the mathematical definition of momentum.
the more force u put on an object the faster it goes 4 example, if a little girl pushes a wagon with a bolder in it it wont go the far but if a full grow man pushed it it would go father because there will b more force.