Math, asked by sugamathi04, 8 months ago

The attachment below is the question. Please help me with it.

Attachments:

Answers

Answered by dhyey5265T
1

Answer:

2........

\huge\bold\red{Hello!!!}Hello!!! \huge\bold\purple{answer\:Your}answerYour

\huge\bold\red{Hello!!!}Hello!!! \huge\bold\purple{answer\:Your}answerYourThe SI unit of acceleration is the metre per second squared (m s−2); or "metre per second per second", as the velocity in metres per second changes by the acceleration value, every second.

\huge\bold\red{Hello!!!}Hello!!! \huge\bold\purple{answer\:Your}answerYourThe SI unit of acceleration is the metre per second squared (m s−2); or "metre per second per second", as the velocity in metres per second changes by the acceleration value, every second.The SI unit of acceleration is the metre per second squared (m s−2); or "metre per second per second", as the velocity in metres per second changes by the acceleration value, every second.SI unit: m/s2, m·s−2, m s−2

\huge\bold\red{Hello!!!}Hello!!! \huge\bold\purple{answer\:Your}answerYourThe SI unit of acceleration is the metre per second squared (m s−2); or "metre per second per second", as the velocity in metres per second changes by the acceleration value, every second.The SI unit of acceleration is the metre per second squared (m s−2); or "metre per second per second", as the velocity in metres per second changes by the acceleration value, every second.SI unit: m/s2, m·s−2, m s−2The SI unit of acceleration is the metre per second squared (m s−2); or "metre per second per second", as the velocity in metres per second changes by the acceleration value, every second.SI unit: m/s2, m·s−2, m s−2Dimension: L T −2

Answered by ashwinanand257
1

Answer is 4. Your can jus see the working on ur own

Similar questions