No. For a start, it doesn't make any sense to add (or subtract) unrelated physical units. For example, you can add mass + mass, or force + force, but not mass + force.
Force plus motion equals acceleration, which is the rate of change of an object's velocity over time. When force is applied to an object in motion, it can either speed up, slow down, or change direction, resulting in acceleration.
The force required can be calculated using Newton's second law, which states that force is equal to mass multiplied by acceleration. Thus, the force required to accelerate the 5.7-kg bowling ball at 2.4 m/s^2 would be (5.7 kg) * (2.4 m/s^2) = 13.68 N.
A liter of water has approximately a mass of one kilogram.
The reaction force when a boy lands on a trampoline and pushes down is the trampoline pushing up on the boy. This is known as Newton's third law of motion, which states that for every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction.
Byt Newton's Second Law, the net force must be in the same direction as the acceleration - if the car slows down, the net force is backwards, and if the car turns right (assuming the speed doesn't change), the acceleration is to the right, and therefore the force is also to the right.
No, work is equal to force times distance. Power is equal to force times distance over time.
When methane burns, the carbon dioxide and water formed, equal the mass of the methane plus the mass of the oxygen.
because the electrons plus the nuetrons equal the mass
No. The force of gravity acting on an object's mass is weight.
atomic mass unit is equal to one-twelfth of the mass of a carbon-12 atomic mass is equal to one-twelfth of the mass of a carbon-12Atomic Mass is equal to the number of protons and neutrons.
35
It is 12
no, the mass number is number of protons in an atom, plus the number of neutrons.
The mass of a paper airplane is equal to the sheet of paper it is constructed out of, plus any additional materials.
Mass is not an intensive property, it is an extensive property, i.e. the mass of a system made of two parts A and B is equal to the mass of A plus the mass of B. An intensive property (e.g. pressure or temperature) is one in which the value of the property for the entire system is equal to the value of the property for any of the subsystems. So, you probably wanted to ask why mass is an extensive property. This is a consequence of the law of gravity and of the fact that forces add up to make a resultant force. The total gravitational force upon a body X by two other bodies A and B is the sum of the force exerted by A and the force exerted by B. It's as if we have a combined body with the mass of A plus the mass of B, and thus mass is extensive.
1.093521974 to the power of 27
Not