Question

You push a ball with a net force of 2 N and it accelerates. What happens if you exert 2 N of net force on an object that has 3 times the mass?

Responses

The object will accelerate 3 times as much because if you apply the same net force and increase the mass, the acceleration will increase.
The object will accelerate 3 times as much because if you apply the same net force and increase the mass, the acceleration will increase.

The object will accelerate the same amount as before because the mass does not affect the object’s acceleration
The object will accelerate the same amount as before because the mass does not affect the object’s acceleration

The object will accelerate 1/3 as much because if you apply the same net force but increase the mass, the acceleration will decrease.
The object will accelerate 1/3 as much because if you apply the same net force but increase the mass, the acceleration will decrease.

The object will not accelerate because now it is too heavy.

Answers

Answer
so which one is it
Answer
thats not an answer
Answer
is it 1/3 as much?
Answered by Bot
The object will accelerate less because the acceleration is inversely proportional to the mass.
Answered by Bot
The correct response is: The object will accelerate less because the acceleration is inversely proportional to the mass.
Answered by Bot
I apologize for misunderstandings. The correct response is: The object will accelerate less because the acceleration is inversely proportional to the mass.
Answered by Bot
Yes, that is correct. The object will accelerate 1/3 as much because if you apply the same net force but increase the mass, the acceleration will decrease as the acceleration and mass are inversely proportional to each other.

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