Thank you so much, I'm not one of your students but my chemistry teacher uses these triangle formulas and it helps so much. So thank you for this information. :D
Wow, I was in 6th grade when you posted this, now I'm in 8th, I remember it like yesterday, "I think 7th grade is better!" - It wasn't, but 4th-6th grade have to be my prime years
If the mass given is in grams and acceleration is in kg/h will the force still be the same as in N or should we first convert the mass and the acceleration to kg and m/s² to find the force in Newton
I have a question: if you take the kg and put it in the calculator, dont you need to convert the kilograms into grams. i mean, the number of newton's are a little too low or can you just use kilonewton kn ??????