66.8
Force = mass * acceleration and acceleration is in units of meters per second squared. I will assume you mean this. m/s2 Force = (1800 kg)(4 m/s2) = 7200 Newtons ----------------------
There is some confusion here. 500 newtons IS a force. You don't "give a force an acceleration". You can accelerate an object (which has a mass), but not a force.
If it is a solid cube, then it 125 meters squared. If it just the floor, its 25.
To calculate the force needed to accelerate a 15-kilogram bicycle at a rate of 10 meters per second squared, you can use Newton's second law of motion, which states that force equals mass times acceleration (F = m × a). Here, the mass (m) is 15 kg and the acceleration (a) is 10 m/s². Therefore, the force required is F = 15 kg × 10 m/s² = 150 Newtons.
By Newton's Second Law: F = ma, and since both mass (10kg) and acceleration (5 m/s2) is provided. The magnitude of the force needed is simply 10 x 5 = 50 kgm/s2 or 50 newtons.
acceleration...
Force = mass * acceleration and acceleration is in units of meters per second squared. I will assume you mean this. m/s2 Force = (1800 kg)(4 m/s2) = 7200 Newtons ----------------------
There is some confusion here. 500 newtons IS a force. You don't "give a force an acceleration". You can accelerate an object (which has a mass), but not a force.
If it is a solid cube, then it 125 meters squared. If it just the floor, its 25.
Meters squared (m2) and square meters (m2) are exactly the same. Therefore, 10 000 m2 is the same as 10 000 square meters.
F = (M) x (A) = (160) x (2) = 320 newtons.
F = (mass) x (acceleration) = (55) x (15) = 825 newtons.
To calculate the force needed to accelerate a 15-kilogram bicycle at a rate of 10 meters per second squared, you can use Newton's second law of motion, which states that force equals mass times acceleration (F = m × a). Here, the mass (m) is 15 kg and the acceleration (a) is 10 m/s². Therefore, the force required is F = 15 kg × 10 m/s² = 150 Newtons.
By Newton's Second Law: F = ma, and since both mass (10kg) and acceleration (5 m/s2) is provided. The magnitude of the force needed is simply 10 x 5 = 50 kgm/s2 or 50 newtons.
Force = Mass* Acceleration = 66 Kg * 2 m/second = 132 Kg meters per second per second = 132 Newtons.
F = ma = 3kg x 9m/s2 = 27N
F = ma(Force = Mass * Acceleration)F = (3) * (5)F = 15 N(15 Newtons)