5 miles per second squared = 8.047 km per second squared (approx) = 8,047 ms2
So a mass of 50 kg, accelerated at 8,047 ms-2 = 402,336 Newtons.
Newton's Second Law of Motion states that Force equals the product of mass and acceleration. Thus, the force required to accelerate a 200 kg object 15 meters per second squared equals 200*15. This is equivalent to 300 Newtons.
F = ma. The math could not be more straightforward. You have F and you have a, so just solve for m.
There is some confusion here. 500 newtons IS a force. You don't "give a force an acceleration". You can accelerate an object (which has a mass), but not a force.
This is because the weight of an object does not affect the acceleration of that object due to gravity. At Earth's surface, the acceleration due to gravity is roughly 9.8m/s2, regardless of the mass of the object.What does differ with the mass of the object is the force of gravity. Force is equal to mass multiplied by acceleration. So a one kilogram object will fall with a force of roughly 9.8 meters squared per second squared, or 9.8 Newtons (N). A two kilogram object would fall with a force of about 19.6N (2kg * 9.8m/s2). This is why when -NOT- in a vacuum, items of different mass can fall at different rates. The additional force of the more massive object will better counter the force of friction with the air, allowing it to fall faster even though it's acceleration is the same.
A falling object accelerates at a rate of 9.8 m/s2. That means that for every second that it is falling, its velocity increases by 9.8 m/s. The higher that the object is falling from, the longer it will have to speed up, thus the higher its velocity upon impact will be. (This is assuming that it does not reach terminal velocity, the velocity at which an object can no longer accelerate because it is travelling so fast that the drag force (air resistance) is equal to the force of gravity.)
F = ma, so if mass is constant, you need to double the force to double the acceleration. The answer is 20 N.
gravity
Newton's second law of motion covers this.The net force on an object accelerates the object.
When an unbalanced force acts on an object, the weight of the object decreases.
When a force is applied to an object, it accelerates. for example, if you push an object, the object accelerates away from you and, eventually, will move away from you..
If an object accelerates, there must be a force acting on it according to newton's second law, so I would answer true.
A hill is not a force, balanced or otherwise. According to Newton's Second Law, if there is any unbalanced force on an object, the object accelerates - its velocity changes.
It accelerates as long as the force is applied, and after that it continues at a uniform speed and direction.
changes the motion of the object
When an object accelerates, the force is unbalanced.
I can say that a force is the ONLY thing that can accelerate an object.
When we apply force on an object, it accelerates in the direction of applied force. This acceleration is directly proportional to the magnitude of force and inversely related to the mass of the object.