Physics, asked by heisnampari99, 2 months ago

Q. What is the relation between mass and motion of a body?​

Answers

Answered by meenamahyavanshi82
0

Explanation:

The larger the mass of a moving object, the less readily it moves. According to Newton's second law of motion, the acceleration that the object experiences is inversely proportional to its mass, and you can calculate this acceleration from the object's change in speed over a set amount of time

Answered by AqsaAbid
0

Answer:

The larger the mass of a moving object, the less readily it moves. According to Newton's second law of motion, the acceleration that the object experiences is inversely proportional to its mass, and you can calculate this acceleration from the object's change in speed over a set amount of time.

Heavier objects (objects with more mass) are more difficult to move and stop. Heavier objects (greater mass) resist change more than lighter objects. Example: Pushing a bicycle or a Cadillac, or stopping them once moving. The more massive the object (more inertia) the harder it is to start or stop.

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