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Both a straight forward and tricky question.

What you need is the equation F = m*a

where F is force, m is mass, and a is acceleration

When an object is said to be moving with a constant velocity its acceleration is zero, however everything on earth feels the force of gravity which causes an acceleration of roughly 9.8m/s^2 downwards. The force due to gravity is

F = 1kg*-9.8m/s^2 = -9.8N

So to lift a 1kg mass with a constant velocity would require a force to counterbalance the force of gravity, thus

F = -Fg = -(-9.8N) = 9.8N

where F is the force you need, and Fg is the force of gravity.

N stands for newtons and is SI unit of force

However, here is the tricky part

Whatever object the 1 kg mass is sitting on is already supplying this amount of force, thus preventing the object from accelerating downwards. If you were to apply exactly 9.8N to the 1 kg mass, it wouldn't actually move, you would simply be doing the work of the table, floor, etc. So to actually get the thing to move you would have to apply a force slightly greater than 9.8N, but once it was moving a force of 9.8N would provide a constant velocity

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16y ago

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