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accelaration is defined as the rate of change of velocity. Therefore the formula for acceleration is a =(Final Velocity - Initial Velocity) divide by the (change in time)
Acceleration is the derivative of the velocity expression. If you have an equation for velocity, simply take the derivative of it and you will have an equation for the average acceleration.
velocity=acceleration multiplied by time
acceleration
Not necessarily. The equation of a projectile, moving under constant acceleration (due to gravity) is a parabola - a non-linear equation.
One equation is Force/acceleration=mass
acceleration = (change in speed) / (time)ora = s/t
i think that its something about science
Equation: Force=Mass X Acceleration If you are looking for the force, use the equation as is. To find the following, it's assumed that you are given the other two values: Mass= Force / Acceleration Acceleration= Force / Mass Remember your labels in your calculations.
The basic equation is: force equals mass times acceleration.
accelaration is defined as the rate of change of velocity. Therefore the formula for acceleration is a =(Final Velocity - Initial Velocity) divide by the (change in time)
Equation: Force=Mass X Acceleration If you are looking for the force, use the equation as is. To find the following, it's assumed that you are given the other two values: Mass= Force / Acceleration Acceleration= Force / Mass Remember your labels in your calculations.
Acceleration is the derivative of the velocity expression. If you have an equation for velocity, simply take the derivative of it and you will have an equation for the average acceleration.
velocity=acceleration multiplied by time
acceleration
Force=mass*acceleration