No. ' a ' (acceleration) is a vector, but ' m ' (mass) is a scalar.
So ' F ' (force) is a vector parallel to ' a ', with magnitude equal to the product ( m |a| ).
f = ma
F = M A is an equation, and you can hardly find another onethat says the same thing better.
In the equation: F is force, m is mass, and a is acceleration. Divide both sides by a, and you have:m = F/a, which is Force divided by acceleration.
M = 930A = 12F = M A = (930) x (12) = 11,160
All of them
F = MA M = F / A A = F / M
Yes!
It is linear function in f and a or in f and m, but not in m and a.
force = mass * acceleration
The algebraic equation is: f = ma
Newton's 2nd Law is Force equals Mass times Acceleration, or F=ma.
f = ma
The formula of Newton's second law is F=ma, for force( F) equals the mass (m) times the acceleration (a).
f=force, m=mass, a=acceleration
F=ma where force(F) equals mass(m) times acceleration(a)
F=MA Force equals mass times acceleration
Force is the product of mass and acceleration, F= ma.