You can't, because you don't have enough information.
In order to find velocity, you need to be able to find the speed and the direction
of motion. You have the speed, but you have no information that you can use to
determine the direction in which the object is moving. Mass doesn't help.
momentum = mass x velocity => mass = momentum / velocity
Power is equal to Force times velocity; P=Fv. You are given the 'speed', which I assume to be velocity. You also have acceleration. In order to find F, you need first to find the mass, which you can calculate from the weight, Fg, by dividing by the acceleration due to gravity, 9.8. You then have the mass. From here, multiply mass times acceleration times the velocity.
You can't. The mass is irrelevant to velocity. You need the distance.
You cannot. Force = Mass*Acceleration or Mass*Rate of change of Velocity.
Use the formula for Kinetic Energy (KE), which is the energy due to the motion of an object. KE = (1/2) * (mass) * (velocity)2 where KE is in joules, mass is in kg, and velocity (or speed) would be in meters/sec...Just substitute the appropriate numbers, rearrange and solve for velocity
momentum = mass x velocity => mass = momentum / velocity
Power is equal to Force times velocity; P=Fv. You are given the 'speed', which I assume to be velocity. You also have acceleration. In order to find F, you need first to find the mass, which you can calculate from the weight, Fg, by dividing by the acceleration due to gravity, 9.8. You then have the mass. From here, multiply mass times acceleration times the velocity.
To get the potential energy when only the mass and velocity time has been given, simply multiply mass and the velocity time given.
You can't. The mass is irrelevant to velocity. You need the distance.
You cannot. Force = Mass*Acceleration or Mass*Rate of change of Velocity.
Use the formula for Kinetic Energy (KE), which is the energy due to the motion of an object. KE = (1/2) * (mass) * (velocity)2 where KE is in joules, mass is in kg, and velocity (or speed) would be in meters/sec...Just substitute the appropriate numbers, rearrange and solve for velocity
You can't. Acceleration is change in velocity. If given a constant velocity, the acceleration is zero.
Good guess but the real answer is mass and speed.
p = mvwhere p is momentum , m is mass and v is velocity
Impluse = m x v
1/2mv^2 = mgh
force=mass x acceleration. you have force lets say 100N. you are given a velocity of lets say 10m/s at the first second. and you are given speed. if you are given one speed, then you are given the change in velocity (your acceleration). if you are given multiple speeds, then you can figure out your change in velocity of the amount of time the speeds are given as (also your acceleration). So lets say you are given a speed of 30m/s at the third second (second second sounds redundant). Assuming acceleration is constant as always, 30-10=20m/s over 2 seconds. So 20/2=10m/s2. now you have force and acceleration. 100= m x 10m/s2. m=10kg.