Because this applies to a special circumstance where f is the magnitude of a force which is perpendular to another force of magnitude n.
f = ma
It is linear function in f and a or in f and m, but not in m and a.
F = M A is an equation, and you can hardly find another onethat says the same thing better.
The algebraic equation is: f = ma
f+7=12 is the equation so, f=5
168
In the equation: F is force, m is mass, and a is acceleration. Divide both sides by a, and you have:m = F/a, which is Force divided by acceleration.
19 = f + 5 Subtract 5 from both sides: 14 = f
If: df+10f = 3 Then: f(d+10) = 3 And: d = 3/f -10
a d = fDivide each side of the equation by 'd' :a = f/d
I think you mean Newton's equation. Force = mass * acceleration
3-e = 4-f f-e = 4-3 f-e = 1