Science, asked by abhishek7120kumar, 8 months ago

what is centre of mass​

Answers

Answered by ar16816
0

Answer:

In physics, acceleration is the rate of change of velocity of an object with respect to time. An object's acceleration is the net result of all forces acting on the object, as described by Newton's Second Law.[1] The SI unit for acceleration is metre per second squared (m⋅s−2). Accelerations are vector quantities (they have magnitude and direction) and add according to the parallelogram law.[2][3] The vector of the net force acting on a body has the same direction as the vector of the body's acceleration, and its magnitude is proportional to the magnitude of the acceleration, with the object's mass (a scalar quantity) as proportionality constant.

Answered by Anonymous
8

<font color="purple">

Centre of mass:-

It is that point where whole mass of the body are assumed to be concentrated on it.

Similar questions