Explore GCSE Physics forces and motion, from resultant forces and acceleration to how mass affects motion in real situations like cars, trolleys and everyday moving objects.
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You can find more about this topic by visiting BBC Bitesize - Describing motion
Changing either mass or resultant force will change the acceleration of an object
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Named after Isaac Newton since he carried out the key work that lead to an understanding of forces, although Galileo had already worked out the first law many years before Newton was born
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This is the equation of Newton's second law of motion
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Only unbalanced forces produce an acceleration
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The gradient of a graph is calculated by dividing the y value by the x value. In this case, you are dividing metres by seconds (or kilometres by hours and so on) so the units will be metres per second (or kilometres per hour etc) which you should recognise as being the units of speed
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Velocity is a vector quantity and has both magnitude (size) and direction. The magnitude represents how fast the object is moving and the direction represents in which direction it is going
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It is always the final velocity minus the initial velocity divided by time. A negative value from the calculation means there was a deceleration
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Remember that acceleration is the rate of change of velocity and its units are m/s2
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The gradient of a velocity-time graph measures the change in velocity per second, in other words, exactly the definition of acceleration
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Using the equation F = m x a, you can calculate the force required to accelerate an object, the mass of it or the acceleration of it when given two of the three values
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