Unanswered Questions on Units in Grade XI Physics

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around understanding specific units in Grade XI physics, particularly focusing on the unit [Kg][Meter][Second]^{-3} and the concept of acceleration. The original poster expresses confusion regarding these topics and seeks clarification.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Conceptual clarification

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • The original poster attempts to identify the name of the unit [Kg][Meter][Second]^{-3} and questions the scalar representation of acceleration. Participants discuss the relationship between force and time, and the scalar quantity associated with acceleration.

Discussion Status

Participants are exploring the definitions and names of physical quantities related to force and acceleration. Some guidance has been offered regarding the nature of acceleration and its scalar counterpart, but no consensus has been reached on specific terminology for the unit in question.

Contextual Notes

The original poster mentions a challenge posed by their tuition teacher, indicating that the questions may be part of a homework assignment. There is an emphasis on understanding rather than simply naming units.

XuryaX
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I am studying in Grade XI and have started with physics. Its very different from physics in last grade. So here are my questions about few units my tution teacher challenged everyone about.

Homework Statement


i)What is the name of the unit
[tex][Kg][Meter][Second]^{-3}[/tex]

ii) What is [tex]|Acceleration|[/tex]

Homework Equations


i) By doing dimensional analysis we get [tex][M][L][T]^{-3}[/tex] , we may also call this Force/Time. Couldn't find anything bout this unit.

ii)
[tex]|Vector| = Scalar[/tex]
[tex]|Displacement|=Distance[/tex]
[tex]|Velocity|=Speed[/tex]
[tex]|Acceleration| =?[/tex]

The Attempt at a Solution



The above is my try, couldn't do anything further.

Thanks for help.

-XuryaX
 
Last edited:
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Welcome to PF.

(i) Looks right. (Are you sure it isn't second-2 ?)

(ii) Acceleration involves something changing ... if you look in your textbook, it should have a discussion and an equation or two for acceleration.
 
Actually, i just need the name of the physical quantity
MLT-2 is force but is there a name for force/time?

And the Scalar quantity of velocity is called speed, what is the scalar quantity of acceleration?
though we in general use acceleration as ther term in our daily lives.
 
XuryaX said:
Actually, i just need the name of the physical quantity
MLT-2 is force but is there a name for force/time?

And the Scalar quantity of velocity is called speed, what is the scalar quantity of acceleration?
though we in general use acceleration as ther term in our daily lives.

Well, I'm only speaking for myself, but I've never encountered any specific names for these.

The quantity you described in (i) could be the change in force over time. Again, there's no name I've ever encountered for this, since this isn't something of much interest to name.
The change in force over time.

As for the scalar quantity of acceleration, if I wanted to get my point across, I'd call it the change in the speed, that's unambiguous enough.
 
Well, these are rather weird questions. I don't know of any single unit name for force/time. Perhaps they mean for you to take the common metric unit of force (which is ____?) and divided it by seconds.

I missed the "absolute value" sign before. I'm not aware of any term associated with |a|.
 

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