1 kg/s = 1N / (1m/s)
Chat with our AI personalities
There's an extra "per second" in the question. One "kilogram-meter per second squared" is one "newton".
kg2m / s
"1 meter per second" is not a rate of acceleration. "1 meter per second per second" or "1 meter per second2" is. The force required to accelerate 1 kilogram of mass at that rate is called "1 Newton".
One mile per hour is equal to 0.447 meters per second.
You have an extra "per second" there. The proper measurement for force is: kg * m/s2, more commonly referred to as Newtons. This means that the force needed to get your one kilogram mass up to a speed of one meter per second within a single second (assuming no friction, initial momentum, or other external factors), would be exactly that: one Newton. * * * * * "per second per second" is an alternative form of "/s2" so there was no extra "per second".