Yes. It's a unit with a precise definition that doesn't refer to location. It doesn't change with location,
in the same way and for the same reason that inches, seconds, and gallons don't change.
Electrons are the particles that move around the nucleus in constant and random motion.
No, cause the temperature is not constant in a propagation of an acoustic wave. But almost accurate. check: http://www.mathpages.com/home/kmath109/kmath109.htm
If an object moved with constant acceleration it's velocity must ?
the newton (:
Born Isaac Newton, later to become Sir Isaac Newton.
"What are length constant and wedge constant in newton's laws of motion?"
Each of those is a locus of constant latitude.
The gravitational constant was found by Newton, not Einstein.
The distance around the globe at the 45th parallel is approximately 16,042 kilometers (9,965 miles).
If the net force on an object is constant, its acceleration will also be constant, as given by Newton's second law of motion.
Sir. Isaac Newton discovered the formula with the universal gravitational constant.
I am not sure what you mean with "force constant". The SI unit of force is the newton.
newton per meter
no
the distance around the globe at the equator is 40075 km.
If one consider the mass and the radius of the Earth constant, then the gravity produces a constant acceleration. This is Newton's Theory about Universal Gravition.
Newton 2nd Law is the answer