The idea here is to apply Newton's Second Law. Solving for mass, you get:m = F/a
a prism, and the telescope
Force is measured using Newton's second law of motion, which states that force is equal to mass times acceleration. The unit of force in the metric system is the newton (N), where 1 newton is equal to 1 kilogram meter per second squared (1 N = 1 kg*m/s^2).
Newton second law state magnitude of acceleration is directly proportional to the force and the direction of the acceleration is same as the force too. The formula is F=ma. In diving, this law apply too:as you dive,if you accelerate or decelerate while diving,you are actually applying Newton second law.
Newton's first law, which states that a body at rest remains at rest and a body in motion remains in motion at constant velocity in a straight line unless acted upon by an unbalanced force.
No. The conditions for Newton's First Law are that there is no acceleration; and these conditions simply don't apply. You need Newton's Second Law for your analysis.
Newton's Second law involves acceleration which is changing the velocity. Velocity can be changed in two ways, direction or speed, so Newton's Law applies to both.
if the player has the ball the to get to the other player, they need a lot of force to get to the other player... yea
To accelerate a 1kg mass at 1m/s^2, you need to apply a force of 1 Newton (N) according to Newton's second law (F=ma).
The idea here is to apply Newton's Second Law. Solving for mass, you get:m = F/a
a prism, and the telescope
Force is measured using Newton's second law of motion, which states that force is equal to mass times acceleration. The unit of force in the metric system is the newton (N), where 1 newton is equal to 1 kilogram meter per second squared (1 N = 1 kg*m/s^2).
Yes.
Yes, the laws of motion apply in outer space.
Newton second law state magnitude of acceleration is directly proportional to the force and the direction of the acceleration is same as the force too. The formula is F=ma. In diving, this law apply too:as you dive,if you accelerate or decelerate while diving,you are actually applying Newton second law.
Newton's first law, which states that a body at rest remains at rest and a body in motion remains in motion at constant velocity in a straight line unless acted upon by an unbalanced force.
Yes.