Help with free fall and Newtons second law problem

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Frankenstein19
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Homework Statement


Using Newtons second law, if an object with mass M is free falling (the only F acting upon it is its own weight), calculate the object's acceleration. What would happen to its acceleration should its mass duplicate?

Homework Equations


F=ma

The Attempt at a Solution


So since the object is free falling its acceleration is = to g. And that should be my answer right?
Could I just do
F=mg
mg=ma
g=a?
or is that just wrong?

then if the objects mass duplicates its acceleration stays the same because its constant? so the objects mass is irrelevant to its acceleration, right??
 
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Frankenstein19 said:
so the objects mass is irrelevant to its acceleration, right??
Right! If I remember correctly, that's exactly what Galileo proved by dropping two different masses from the Tower of Pisa..
 
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