Physics, asked by jtctransport4781, 8 months ago

state newton's second law of motion​

Answers

Answered by MrPrince07
1

Explanation:

Newton’s second law of motion can be stated as the acceleration of an object as produced by a net force is directly proportional to the magnitude of the net force, in the same direction as the net force, and inversely proportional to the mass of the object.

Let us consider an object of mass m, moving along a straight line with an initial velocity u. Let us say, after a certain time t, with a constant acceleration, the final velocity becomes v.Here we see that, the initial momentum

p1 = m × u

the final momentum

p2 = m × v

The change in momentum is

p2 – p1 = (m × v) – (m × u)

p2 – p1 = m (v – u)

The rate of change of momentum with respect to time is proportional to the applied force. The applied force is

F ∝ m (v – u)/t

or

F ∝ m × a

a = Rate of change of velocity/Time

F = k × m × a

k = proportionality constant.

Hence from the second law of motion, we get force is the product of mass and acceleration i.e F = ma.

Answered by jaripitisreeram95
1

Answer:

For a constant mass m, Newton's second law looks like: F = m * (V1 - V0) / (t1 - t0) The change in velocity divided by the change in time is the definition of the acceleration a. The second law then reduces to the more familiar product of a mass and an acceleration: F = m * a.

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