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acceleration |
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accelerationRate of change of the velocity of a moving body. It is usually measured in feet per second per second (ft s−2) or meters per second per second (m s−2). Because velocity is a vector quantity (possessing both magnitude and direction) a body travelling at constant speed may be said to be accelerating if its direction of motion changes. According to Newton's second law of motion, a body will accelerate only if it is acted upon by an unbalanced, or resultant, force. Acceleration due to gravity is the acceleration of a body falling freely under the influence of the Earth's gravitational field; it varies slightly at different latitudes and altitudes. The value adopted internationally for gravitational acceleration is 32.174 ft s−2/9.806 ms−2. The average acceleration a of an object travelling in a straight line over a period of time t may be calculated using the formula: How to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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| ? Mentioned in | ? References in periodicals archive | |
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Among them are Galileo's
experiment with inclined planes that established a mathematical formula
for accelerated motion, Isaac Newton's unraveling of the nature of
light and color, and Thomas Young's two-slit experiment that
revealed the wavelike character of light. And not
only in the phenomena of the pendulum did he discover regularity; the
investigation of motion along a sloping plane convinced him after many
measurements that all phenomena of gravity could be described in the
most simple way by means of uniformly accelerated motion. 0, and adds modules
for accelerated motion tracking, image stabilization, and corner pinning
- functions that are the foundations for successful paint and
rotoscoping work. |
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