Physics, asked by sanskruti1606, 1 year ago

how do we calculate linear acceleration?

Answers

Answered by vanshika7241
1
Looking at each equation, they are not as similar as some of the other equations are:

Anglular acceleration = velocity squared / radiusLinear acceleration = force/ mass

I would think angular acceleration would take torque into consideration. How is Vsquared similar in relation to force, and how is radius's relation to Vsquared match the relationship between mass and force?



I suppose the root of this misunderstanding is how I'm thinking of angular acceleration, which is only an vector representing an axis's direction, and having a magnitude equal to the number of radians rotated per second.


sanskruti1606: thankyou
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