The product of mass in kilograms and velocity in meters per second is the momentum of the object, measured in kilogram-meters per second (kg*m/s).
8000 meters multiplied by 20 meters equals 160,000 square meters.
Well, there are 1609.344 meter in one mile, and there are 3600 seconds in one hour, so 1mph times 1609.344 meters per mile equals 1609.344 meters per hour and 1609.344 meters per hour times 1 hour per 3600 seconds equals .44704 meters per second. In other words take your mph, multiply by .44704, and that's how many meters per second it equals.
No... According to Newton's Second Law of Motion, a force (in newtons) is equal to the mass (in kilograms) times the acceleration(meters per second squared). It can be rewritten as a = F/m and m = F/a as well.
To convert rpm to meters per second, you can use the formula: speed (m/s) = (rpm * 2π * radius) / 60. First, calculate the angular speed by multiplying rpm by 2π, then multiply by the radius in meters, and divide by 60 to convert to meters per second.
The product of mass in kilograms and velocity in meters per second is the momentum of the object, measured in kilogram-meters per second (kg*m/s).
There are 1,000 meters in 1 kilograme, so to convert 10 kilograms to meters, you will need to take how many kilograms you have, which is 10, times meter per kilograms, which is 1,000 which will look like 10 x 1,000 which equals 10,000 meters
F = ma Force (in Newtons) equals mass (in kilograms) times acceleration (in meters per second squared) In this case, 450 = 30a, so the accelerating is 15 meters per second squared
Kilograms times second per meter is a unit of measurement for momentum, which represents the product of mass and velocity. Specifically, it describes how much momentum a moving object has per unit length.
New answer - J=kg*m^2/s^2. J/kg=m^2/s^2 The definition of Joule is N * m (Newtons times meters) The definition of Newton is kg * m / s2 (kilograms times meters divided by seconds squared) Dividing the unit Joule by kilograms leaves meters per second squared (or meters mer second per second)
Force equals mass times acceleration. Similarly, acceleration equals force divided by mass. So, 50 Newtons divided by 0.5 kilograms is 100 meters per second squared.
In physics, the net force is measured in Newton. The formula for net force is given as the mass times the acceleration. The mass is given in kilograms (kg), and the acceleration is measured in meters per second squared. A Newton is equivalent to a kilogram-meters per second squared.
Force equals mass times acceleration; so acceleration equals force divided by mass. 12 newtons divided by 2 kilograms equals 6 metres per second per second. (newtons are (kilogram times metre) divided by seconds squared)
Momentum is defined as mass times velocity, and it requires units of mass times units of velocity. The SI unit is kilograms x meters / second. There is no special name for this combination of units. Impulse (force times time) has the same units.
In panpsychism, (an "awareness" or "consciousness" of self as opposed to otherness) qualitative ideas (words) through a long history identify a pleasing philosophy but they lack quantitative factors to make it appreciated by science. Considering that motion and growth are two processes that require the action of energy upon a system in contact with its surroundings in a thermodynamic sense, I am tentatively proposing that the ratio of "kilograms per meter" converts the usual energy of motion (force times distance) to a panpsychistic form that recognizes mass (as energy per mc^2) per distance of space. (Being developed in the Physics Forum blog with references and hopefully the Institute of Human Thermodynamics web site).
8000 meters multiplied by 20 meters equals 160,000 square meters.
Well, there are 1609.344 meter in one mile, and there are 3600 seconds in one hour, so 1mph times 1609.344 meters per mile equals 1609.344 meters per hour and 1609.344 meters per hour times 1 hour per 3600 seconds equals .44704 meters per second. In other words take your mph, multiply by .44704, and that's how many meters per second it equals.