Force Formula

PHYSICS

Force formula (Newton's second law)

Newton's second law gives the force needed to accelerate a mass. Force equals mass times acceleration — the heavier the object or the faster you want to change its motion, the more force it takes.

F = m a

What each symbol means

Symbol Meaning Units
F Force newtons (N)
m Mass kilograms (kg)
a Acceleration meters per second squared (m/s²)

Rearranged forms

Solve for mass: m = F / a
Solve for acceleration: a = F / m

Worked example

A 10 kg cart accelerates at 2 m/s². Find the force.

  1. Start from F = m a.
  2. Substitute m = 10 kg and a = 2 m/s².
  3. Multiply: F = 10 × 2.
F = 20 N

Use SI units: kilograms, meters per second squared, and newtons. One newton accelerates one kilogram at one meter per second squared. Weight is a force too: W = m g, with g ≈ 9.81 m/s².

Need force, mass, or acceleration?

Enter any two and the Mechanical Force Calculator returns the third.

How Newton's second law works

A net force changes an object's motion. The same force produces a large acceleration on a light object and a small one on a heavy object, which is why mass is called inertia — the resistance to being accelerated. Double the force and you double the acceleration; double the mass and you halve it.

Where it is used

F = m a is the workhorse of mechanics — vehicle acceleration and braking, structural and machine design, rocketry, and any problem involving motion under a force. It also leads to weight (W = m g) and to momentum and impulse.

FAQ

What is the force formula?

F = m a: force equals mass times acceleration. Rearranged, m = F / a and a = F / m.

What are the units of force?

Newtons (N) in SI. One newton equals one kg·m/s², the force that accelerates a one-kilogram mass at one meter per second squared.

Is weight the same as force?

Weight is the force of gravity on a mass: W = m g, with g about 9.81 m/s² on Earth. A 10 kg mass weighs about 98 N.

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