Physics, asked by chumkeydembhutia136, 9 months ago

In the equation F= mxa,what does m represent​

Answers

Answered by livegamer63p
3

Answer:

Newton's second law of motion describes the relationship between an object's mass and the amount of force needed to accelerate it. Newton's second law is often stated as F=ma, which means the force (F) acting on an object is equal to the mass (m) of an object times its acceleration (a)

Answered by rubipreethi2004
1

Answer:

here m represents mass

Explanation:

Force is directly proportional to rate of change of linear momentum

Force is directly proportional to change in momentum by time

F=km(v_u)/t

F=m(v_u)/t

since k=1 in all system of units

(v_u)/t=a(acceleration=change in velocity/time)

F=m×a

Force=mass×acceleration

Hope it helps

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