What is the mass of the wagon in this physics problem?

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To determine the mass of the wagon, the relevant physics formula is F = m*a. Given a force of 42N and an acceleration of 3.0 m/s², the mass can be calculated by rearranging the formula to m = F/a. The first force of 6N is not necessary for this calculation, as the problem focuses on the second scenario where the wagon is accelerated. The discussion highlights the importance of understanding the relationship between force, mass, and acceleration in solving physics problems.
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i have a test on friday and i know these kinds of questions will be on it, but i just can't figure it out. here's a real easy version of those questions and i was hoping you guys could clear up for me the basic way to do this:

a man finds that a 6N force will pull a toy wagon along a level table at a constant velocity. He also finds that a 42N force will accelerate the same wagon at 3.0m/s2 along the same table. what is the mass of the wagon?

thanks for your help!
 
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ok, do you have the correct answer for this? I'm assuming there's friction or air resistance or something since when you apply the first force there's no acceleration. So you do SumF= ma and i assume there's some counter force (F) that accounts for the zero acceleration. So, 6N + F= m(0), the mystery counter force, (friction or whatever,) is -6. So, i do SumF= ma again with the second force and our new found counter force, and plug in the given acceleration and solve for mass.
 
I am not a teacher and I am not experienced at explaining or solving mathematics problems.
I reply to hebdens post in order to test my understanding.


Basically your problem is to solve is F= m*a

The force was given, and
The acceleration was given.

Rearranging the formula may help.

Forget the first force value of 6N it is irrelevant at first.

I believe friction can be ignore in this question.

below is starting point. good luck to those who are trying to solve this 4 years later.

F=42N
a=3.0m/s^2
m=?
 
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