strictly speaking, in a=f/m the units for a are (m/s)/s
example: apply a force of 1000 n to a mass of 100 kg, this will result in an acceleration of 1000/100 = 10 (m/s)/s , meaning its velocity will increase by 10 m/s every second
Its a matter of being scientifically rigorous. You can not claim the 2nd law as a law unless you first establish the first law.
acceleration
Newtons second law
Actually, the first one is completely independent on the second one. But the second one doesn't make any sense without the first one.
Every single object that exists obeys ALL of Newtons Laws
F=ma Input: newtons second law at wolframalpha.com
newtons * meters squared / coulombs squared
No
Its a matter of being scientifically rigorous. You can not claim the 2nd law as a law unless you first establish the first law.
The original formula Force=(mv-mu)/twhere m-mass, v- final velocity, u- initial velocity, t- timeThe derived form Force= mass x acceleration
acceleration
its not importsnt
Gravity exerts a force; the Second Law states that such a force will cause an acceleration, which can be calculated as:a = F/m (acceleration = force divided by mass).
This is because two concepts are derived from the newtons second law. First : Force . F = m * a Second : momentum .. p = m * v
the second law
The clue is in the question.
Newtons second law