Acceleration due to gravity at the space station
What is the acceleration due to gravity at the space station.
What is the acceleration due to gravity at the space station.
In this video we’re going to discover how to factorise quadratics that don’t have 1 as the coefficient of the x-squared term. These are called non-monic quadratics. We can do it by trial and error and just spotting the factors, but this takes a lot of trial an error. Luckily there is a different method we can use instead, which we will looks at in this video.
Why do astronauts appear weightless despite being near the Earth?
Basics of gravity and the Law of Universal Gravitation.
An elaboration on how to use Newton's second law when dealing with multiple forces, forces in two dimensions, and diagonal forces.
This unit is about how things move along a straight line or, more scientifically, how things move in one dimension. Examples of this would be the movement (motion) of cars along a straight road or of trains along straight railway tracks.
Newton's second law of motion is F = ma, or force is equal to mass times acceleration. Learn how to use the formula to calculate acceleration.
In this course you will learn how to:
By the end of this unit you will be able to:
By the end of this unit you will be able to: