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No, a force is not a motion. A force may produce motion of a mass.
No, motion is not a force. Motion is a change of coordinates. However, motion usually is a result of applying a force.
The formula of Newton's second law is F=ma, for force( F) equals the mass (m) times the acceleration (a).
The formula for force is( Force=mass multiplied by acceleration). To answer your question, we can see that as and distance are directly proportional. If you increase mass, to get to your target force, you will not need as much acceleration.
A force that maintains motion is called inertia. This is the same as to what is normally referred to as momentum.
force is Mass*acceleration
Force is exerted on an object. Its formula is F=MA where M is mass and A is acceleration. Motion is moving relative to a point.
To achieve more acceleration, you need more force.
No, a force is not a motion. A force may produce motion of a mass.
Newton's First Law of MotionEvery body tries to be in motion or rest until and unless an external fore is applied.So, there is no formula for it!
Well, the formula F=MxA is a scientific formula discovered by Sir Isaac Newton. Which is also known as Newton's Law Of Motion. What this formula means is Force=Mass x Acceleration. Which is the creation of force.
F=ma (net force = mass times acceleration)
The formula of Newton's second law is F=ma, for force( F) equals the mass (m) times the acceleration (a).
No, motion is not a force. Motion is a change of coordinates. However, motion usually is a result of applying a force.
Work = (Force) x (Distance the object moves) x (cosine of the angle between force and motion)
Force has size, which is how much force put into somethig, e.g., 10 Newtons of force. It has motion because force is basically motion, because force can be unbalanced or balanced, and unbalanced causes motion, and is basically motion.
a=f/ m