geofix said:
for example I know that velocity = distance/time
these units are easy to understand but when it comes to force
force = mass * acceleration,
how do I figure out the velocity or acceleration of a still object?
F= MA
A=F/M
Need force and the mass. this seems circular logic.
Whether you are using velocity * time = distance or force = mass * acceleration, you need to know two to find the third.
You also seem a bit confused between dimensions and units. There are some dimensions generally considered fundamental (though there can be debate about this), such as mass, distance, time. Other dimensions can be defined in terms of these: velocity, force, acceleration,pressure, density...
For each dimension we can define units for quantifying it. They are essentially arbitrary, just standards we agree on. In the IS system, we use kg for mass, Pa for pressure, m for distance, Newtons for force. This system has the great benefit that there are no conversion factors. If you have a mass in its standard unit and an acceleration in its standard distance and time units then the numerical product is the force that would produce that acceleration on that mass, in its standard units.
geofix said:
how do mass and acceleration affect the force?
They don't, in any causal sense. Force and mass may be considered causes, with acceleration the consequence. And to be clear, it is ΣF=ma, i.e., the acceleration is the
net force divided by the mass. But that doesn't mean you always haveto start with knowledge of the mass and force. If I place a weight on the floor, and it does not fall through, then I can observe that the acceleration is zero and deduce that the normal force equals the weight.