The work done is the force multiplied by the distance. You don't have the force in this case; if there is no friction, you would need zero work. If the mass moves is on a flat surface, multiply by the coefficient of friction to get the force required. The coefficient of friction varies for different combinations of materials.
The work done is the force multiplied by the distance. You don't have the force in this case; if there is no friction, you would need zero work. If the mass moves is on a flat surface, multiply by the coefficient of friction to get the force required. The coefficient of friction varies for different combinations of materials.
The work done is the force multiplied by the distance. You don't have the force in this case; if there is no friction, you would need zero work. If the mass moves is on a flat surface, multiply by the coefficient of friction to get the force required. The coefficient of friction varies for different combinations of materials.
The work done is the force multiplied by the distance. You don't have the force in this case; if there is no friction, you would need zero work. If the mass moves is on a flat surface, multiply by the coefficient of friction to get the force required. The coefficient of friction varies for different combinations of materials.
98g/s2
In that case, the mass will also be 10 kg.
F = M A A = F / M = (5) / (10) = 1/2 meter per second2
To accelerate a 20kg bicycle (10kg bike + 10kg rider) at a rate of 2 m/s^2, you would need a force of 40 newtons. This is calculated by multiplying the mass (20kg) by the acceleration (2 m/s^2).
The force needed to accelerate an object can be calculated using Newton's Second Law, which states that force equals mass times acceleration (F=ma). If the mass of the object is 10kg and the desired acceleration is known, the force required can be calculated by multiplying the mass by the acceleration.
98g/s2
(4 x 5) kilogram-meters = 20 joules
That would depend on the volume (density) of the 10kg object.
Both the 10kg stack of books and the 10kg piece of Styrofoam weigh the same amount, 10kg, because weight is a measure of the force due to gravity acting on an object's mass.
In that case, the mass will also be 10 kg.
Please multiply the mass by the gravity. On Earth, the gravity is approximately 9.8 newton/kilogram (= 9.8 meters/second2).
Uranus's mass is 8.6832*10kg
98.07 newtons (Force = mass x acceleration)
2000k
F=mass * acceleration 60kg m/s^2=10kg * acceleration 6m/s^2 = acceleration
F = M A A = F / M = (5) / (10) = 1/2 meter per second2
Their mass is the same.