If the mass of an object increases, what happens to the acceleration?
If you increase the force on an object acceleration increases . As F = m*a, where F = Force , m = mass of the object & a = acceleration
F=m.a , a=F/m; acceleration is directly proportional with force. acceleration increase while force increase.
Acceleration is a net force that is inversely dependent on mass, therefore if an object's mass decreases, acceleration increases.
-Reduce the object's mass. -Increase the force applied to the object
You increase the object's acceleration.
If the acceleration changes, the velocity of an object will also change. If the acceleration increases, the velocity will increase. If the acceleration decreases, the velocity will decrease. The velocity and acceleration of an object are directly related.
its acceleration will be increased
U can increase and decrease it
Acceleration is the term that describes an increase or decrease in velocity or a change in direction of an object.
If you increase the force on an object acceleration increases . As F = m*a, where F = Force , m = mass of the object & a = acceleration
Acceleration, it can be both increase and decrease in speed. .
Decrease the mass, and change the force.
If you increase the force on an object acceleration increases . As F = m*a, where F = Force , m = mass of the object & a = acceleration
From Newton's Second Law of Motion, I know that Fnet=manet. anet is the net acceleration. From this equation, I know that Fnet is proportional to anet. THis means that if I decrease the net force, I decrease the net acceleration. If I increase the net force, I increase the net acceleration. If your Fnet equation is Fnet=Fapp-Ff, then increasing the applied force would also increase the net acceleration. Therefore, more applied fore, more acceleration.
To increase the magnitude of an object's acceleration, you can either increase the force applied to the object or decrease the object's mass. Both of these factors affect the rate at which an object's velocity changes, leading to a greater acceleration.
If an object travels with constant acceleration, its speed will change at a constant rate over time. The object's speed will increase if the acceleration is positive, decrease if it is negative, and remain constant if the acceleration is zero.
If you increase the mass of an object and keep the force constant, the acceleration of the object will decrease because the force-to-mass ratio decreases. Conversely, if you increase the force applied to an object while keeping the mass constant, the acceleration of the object will increase because the force-to-mass ratio increases.