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1. How is an object’s mass related to the force needed to accelerate the object?

1. How is an object’s mass related to the force needed to accelerate the object?. Mass is not related to the force needed. The smaller the mass, the greater the force needed. The greater the mass, the greater the force needed. The greater the mass, the smaller the force needed.

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1. How is an object’s mass related to the force needed to accelerate the object?

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  1. 1. How is an object’s mass related to the force needed to accelerate the object? • Mass is not related to the force needed. • The smaller the mass, the greater the force needed. • The greater the mass, the greater the force needed. • The greater the mass, the smaller the force needed.

  2. 2. Air resistance is an example of • gravity. • A noncontact force. • A net force. • Friction.

  3. 3. A baby pushes on a large chair. What is the reaction force? • Friction pushes on the chair. • Friction pushes on the baby. • The chair pushes on the baby. • The chair pushes on the floor.

  4. 4. The tendency of an object at rest to stay at rest is • acceleration. • Balanced forces. • Inertia. • Velocity.

  5. 5. A piece of wood has a mass of 18 grams and a volume of 30 cm3. What is the density of the wood? • 0.6 g/cm3 • 7.2 g/cm3 • 12 g/ cm3 • 48 g/ cm3

  6. 6. A more massive marble collides with a less massive one that is not moving. The total momentum after the collision is equal to • Zero • The original momentum of the more massive marble • The original momentum of the less massive marble • Twice the original momentum of the more massive marble.

  7. 7. Newton’s second law states that to increase acceleration, you • Increase force • Decrease force • Increase mass • Increase inertia

  8. 8. What units are used to measure force? • Kilograms • Meters • Newtons • seconds

  9. 9. A wagon is pulled down a hill with a constant velocity. All the forces on the wagon are • Balanced • Unbalanced • increasing • decreasing

  10. 10. An action force and its reaction force are • Equal in size and direction • Equal in size and opposite in direction • Different in size but in the same direction • Different in size and direction

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