Science, asked by anish9339, 1 year ago

Define the unit of force using the second law of motion .A force of 5N produces an acceleration of 8m/s^2 on a mass m1 and an acceleration of 24m/s^2 on a mass m2. what acceleration would the same force provide if both the masses are tied together?

Answers

Answered by xheikhfiza
2

Suppose an object of mass, m is moving along a straight line with an initial velocity, u.

It is uniformly accelerated to velocity, v in time, t by the application of a constant force, F

throughout the time, t. The initial and final momentum of the object will be,

p1 = mu and p2 = mv respectively.

The change in momentum ∝ p2 – p1

The change in momentum∝ mv – mu

The change in momentum∝ m × (v – u).

The rate of change of momentum ∝ m × (v −u)/t

Or, the applied force,

F ∝m × (v −u)/t

F = km (v - u)/t


F = kma

Here a [a = (v – u)/t ] is the acceleration, which is the rate of change of velocity. The quantity, k is a constant of proportionality.The SI units of mass and acceleration are kg and m s-2 respectively. The unit of force is so chosen that the value of the constant, k becomes one. For this, one unit of force is

defined as the amount that produces an acceleration of 1 m s-2 in an object of 1 kg mass.

That is, 1 unit of force = k × (1 kg) × (1 m s-2).

Thus, the value of k becomes 1. and

F = ma which is the mathematical expression on the Newton's second law of motion.

                                 or

Change in momentum = m(v-u)÷t

V-u /t is acceleration

Thus.

Force =mass×acceleration

=kgm/s×s=newton



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