Assuming you really mean miles, 36 miles is 57934.8 metres.
Force is mass times acceleration;
Force = 18 X 57934.8
Force = 1 042 826.4 newtons, 1.04 meganewtons (MN)
A Boeing 747 aeroplane generates between 200 and 300 kilonewtons per engine (300 kN = 0.3 MN)
Meters per second squared I think thank you
F = M A = (18) x (36) = 648 newtons
In which of the following units is acceleration expressed? A. newtons B. Foot-pounds C. Kilograms D. MetersPer Second Squared In which of the following units is acceleration expressed? A. newtons B. Foot-pounds C. Kilograms D. MetersPer Second Squared
A newton is the force required to provide a mass of one kg with an acceleration of one meter per second squared.
Assuming you want the international units: time: second velocity: meters / second distance: meters acceleration: meters / second2
One newton.
Other way to say effort force Force = Kilograms * meters / (second squared) in other words mass times acceleration.
New answer - J=kg*m^2/s^2. J/kg=m^2/s^2 The definition of Joule is N * m (Newtons times meters) The definition of Newton is kg * m / s2 (kilograms times meters divided by seconds squared) Dividing the unit Joule by kilograms leaves meters per second squared (or meters mer second per second)
In physics, the net force is measured in Newton. The formula for net force is given as the mass times the acceleration. The mass is given in kilograms (kg), and the acceleration is measured in meters per second squared. A Newton is equivalent to a kilogram-meters per second squared.
Kinetic energy = 1/2(mass in kg)(meters per second squared ) KE = 1/2(175 kilograms)(3 m/s)^2 = 787.5 Joules
Newton's Second Law of Motion states that Force equals the product of mass and acceleration. Thus, the force required to accelerate a 200 kg object 15 meters per second squared equals 200*15. This is equivalent to 300 Newtons.
F = ma Force (in Newtons) equals mass (in kilograms) times acceleration (in meters per second squared) In this case, 450 = 30a, so the accelerating is 15 meters per second squared