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A mass of 120.2 g is accelerated by a force. The acceleration of the mass is 5 m/s2 in the direction of the applied force. What is the force causing this acceleration?

Question

A mass of 120.2 g is accelerated by a force. The acceleration of the mass is 5 m/s2 in the direction of the applied force. What is the force causing this acceleration?

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Solution

To find the force causing the acceleration, we can use Newton's second law of motion, which states that Force = mass x acceleration.

Given: Mass (m) = 120.2 g = 0.1202 kg (since 1 g = 0.001 kg) Acceleration (a) = 5 m/s²

Now, we can substitute these values into the formula:

Force (F) = m x a Force (F) = 0.1202 kg x 5 m/s² Force (F) = 0.601 kg.m/s² or 0.601 Newtons

So, the force causing this acceleration is 0.601 Newtons.

This problem has been solved

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