Difference between revisions of "Newton"
Happycupcake (talk | contribs) (Merged sentence on Isaac Newton into first paragraph and added explanation on why the units are kg*m/s^2) |
|||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
:''You may be looking for [[Isaac Newton]] instead.'' | :''You may be looking for [[Isaac Newton]] instead.'' | ||
− | A '''Newton''' (abbreviated N) is the [[Système international|metric]] measure of [[force]], named for [[Isaac Newton]], whom did extensive research in [[physics]]. | + | A '''Newton''' (abbreviated N) is the [[Système international|metric]] measure of [[force]], named for [[Isaac Newton]], whom did extensive research in [[physics]], including his famous three laws of Physics. |
− | One Newton is equal to one kilo[[gram]] times one [[meter]] per [[second]] squared, or <math>\mathrm{N}=\mathrm{kg}\times \mathrm{m}/\mathrm{s}^2</math> | + | One Newton is equal to one kilo[[gram]] times one [[meter]] per [[second]] squared, or <math>\mathrm{N}=\mathrm{kg}\times \mathrm{m}/\mathrm{s}^2</math>. This is because F=ma, which means force (Newtons) equals mass (kilograms) times acceleration (meters per second squared). |
− | |||
==See also== | ==See also== |
Revision as of 11:42, 11 July 2019
- You may be looking for Isaac Newton instead.
A Newton (abbreviated N) is the metric measure of force, named for Isaac Newton, whom did extensive research in physics, including his famous three laws of Physics.
One Newton is equal to one kilogram times one meter per second squared, or . This is because F=ma, which means force (Newtons) equals mass (kilograms) times acceleration (meters per second squared).
See also
This article is a stub. Help us out by expanding it.