F = (mass) x (acceleration) = (55) x (15) = 825 newtons.
accelerate
The Continental Army after the second continental congress realized they needed a force to protect America if they went into war
If an object moves in a circle, the centripetal acceleration can be calculated as speed squared divided by the radius. The centripetal force, of course, is calculated with Newton's Second Law: force = mass x acceleration. Therefore, the centripetal force will be equal to mass x speed2 / radius.
Friction.Called inertia. To accelerate a body the force is mass times acceleration. No force = no acceleration. People say " the force is opposed by the massacceleration"
A bat hitting a baseball is an example of an action force.
Force = Mass* Acceleration = 66 Kg * 2 m/second = 132 Kg meters per second per second = 132 Newtons.
acceleration...
F = (M) x (A) = (160) x (2) = 320 newtons.
F = ma = 3kg x 9m/s2 = 27N
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.
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.
One newton.
Force = mass * acceleration and acceleration is in units of meters per second squared. I will assume you mean this. m/s2 Force = (1800 kg)(4 m/s2) = 7200 Newtons ----------------------
Force is defined as mass times acceleration. The unit of force is the Newton*:Related Information:* 1 Newton = 1 kg m / s2 (kilogram meters per second squared)More force is needed to make a heavier thing accelerate more.
F = ma, so if mass is constant, you need to double the force to double the acceleration. The answer is 20 N.
F = m A = (3 kg) (4 m/s2) = 12 kg-m/s2 = 12 newtons
By Newton's Second Law: F = ma, and since both mass (10kg) and acceleration (5 m/s2) is provided. The magnitude of the force needed is simply 10 x 5 = 50 kgm/s2 or 50 newtons.