Physics, asked by dannychryz, 2 months ago

The weight of an object is the product of its mass, m, and the acceleration of gravity, g (where g=9.8 m/s2). If an object’s mass is m=10. kg, what is its weight?

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
1

weight = mass × gravity

=10×9.8

=98N

Answered by itzsecretagent
47

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{\color{navy}{\textsf{\textbf{ Giνєη }}}}

  • The mass of the object, m = 10 kg
  • The acceleration due to gravity, g = 9.8 m/s²

The weight of an object is given by the following equation:

W = mg

, where m is the mass and

  • g = 9.8 m/s² is the acceleration due to gravity.

After plugging the given values into the above equation, we have:

 \sf \: W = 10 \: kg×9.8 \: m/ {s}^{2} \\  \\  \sf  \dashrightarrow  98 \: kg⋅m/ {s}^{2} × \frac{1 \: N}{1 \: kg⋅m/ {s}^{2} }  \\  \\  \sf \dashrightarrow \: 98 \: N \\  \\  \dashrightarrow  \boxed{ \sf \pink{≈ \:100 \: N}}

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