What is a Newton

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See the definition of a newton and how understanding it serves as a basic foundation for physics
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I have never seen someone explain Newton so beautifully. I feel this is how it should be explained. The video is just 4mins long, idk if Newton himself could have explained that in a lean manner like this. Respect

Harry-
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Great explanation. Thank you! Nobody will tell you these things at school - or most of them. I am grateful for the internet and for people like you who make the internet great!

dominikbaricak
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Sooo cool!!
Why do i have this strange feeling that i learn more from books and youtube than from school?
Thanks so much for the video. It has helped me a lot.!! 😊

chrissky
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This is a really great explanation! Thanks for making the video, helps a lot

nonplussedperson
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Thank you so much. I loved how you demystified the acceleration nonsense i love you!

stalinchinguetas
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Thank you for this video. I wonder about how force of gravity 9.8N down on your 1Kg mass in your acceleration example.

amandasaintil
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why doesn't the Newton account for friction though? like, the force needed to make a 1 kg metal thing like yours slide and accelerate of 1 m/s every second on a table covered in oil isn't the same as the force needed to make the same thing slide on concrete, which is gonna apply more friction on the metal thing.

albertogazzin
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If I hang a 1 kg weight by a rope over a pulley. Then I hand another weight(1kg) on the other side of the pulley. They will cancel each other. When I will move one side of it 1 meter up or down. Will it be exact force that is called 1n?

MohsinExperiments
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@1:12, 1N is defined as amount of force required to accelerate 1 kg of mass at the rate of 1 m/s for every second... this means that 1 kg of mass will have the velocity of 1 m/s at the end of first second . At 1:30, my question here is, if you accelerate at 1 m/s^2, you cannot reach 1 meter in one second, you can reach just 0.5 meter .. like a mass falling from a height(experience acceleration due to gravity) will not cover a distance 9.8 meter at end of the first second. where am i going wrong here ?

saransaran
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If you don’t know let me tell you .. You’re Amazing ❤️

khalidbakr
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if m = 1 kg, a = 1 (m/s)/s, then it would actually move 0, 5 m in 1 second, wouldn't it? It would have a speed of 1 m/s at the end of that second.

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