Force Calculator — F = ma
Calculate force using Newton's Second Law (F = ma), find net force from multiple forces, compute weight force, applied force with friction, and average force from impulse — all with step-by-step working.
| Body | g (m/s²) | Weight (N) | Weight (lbf) | Weight (kgf) |
|---|
F = ma — Newton's Second Law of Motion
This force calculator solves Newton's Second Law (F = ma) for force, mass, or acceleration, and also computes net force from multiple forces, weight force, applied force with friction, and average force from impulse. Whether you need to find force in Newtons (N) or convert between force units, every tool includes full step-by-step working.
Each variable in F = ma represents a measurable physical quantity:
- F = net force acting on the object, measured in Newtons (N)
- m = mass of the object, measured in kilograms (kg)
- a = acceleration produced, measured in metres per second squared (m/s²)
Physically, F = ma tells us: force causes acceleration. No net force means no acceleration (Newton's First Law). More mass requires more force for the same acceleration. More force on the same mass gives more acceleration. Force and acceleration always act in the same direction.
The three rearrangements of F = ma are:
- Find force: F = ma
- Find mass: m = F / a
- Find acceleration: a = F / m (see also our Acceleration Calculator)
Connection to other equations: F = ma = m(Δv/Δt) = Δ(mv)/Δt = Δp/Δt (rate of change of momentum). The weight formula W = mg is a special case of F = ma where a = g (gravitational acceleration). When Fnet = 0 → a = 0 → constant velocity (Newton's First Law).
The unit derivation: [F] = [m] × [a] = kg × m/s² = N (Newton). One Newton is the force that accelerates 1 kg at 1 m/s².
| Unit | Equal to | Common Use |
|---|---|---|
| 1 N (Newton) | 1 kg·m/s² | SI standard |
| 1 kN | 1,000 N | Engineering |
| 1 lbf | 4.448 N | Imperial |
| 1 kgf | 9.807 N | Weight of 1 kg on Earth |
| 1 dyne | 10⁻⁵ N | CGS system |
| 1 MN | 1,000,000 N | Large structural forces |
How to Calculate Force Using F = ma — Step-by-Step
Use this four-step method to calculate force with F = ma every time:
- Step 1: Identify the mass m in kilograms (convert lb to kg if needed: 1 lb = 0.4536 kg)
- Step 2: Identify the acceleration a in m/s² (convert if needed)
- Step 3: Multiply: F = m × a
- Step 4: Express in desired units (N, kN, lbf)
Example 1 — Basic Force
A 10 kg object accelerates at 5 m/s². Find the force.
- m = 10 kg, a = 5 m/s²
- Formula: F = ma
- F = 10 × 5 = 50 N
Example 2 — Convert Mass Units
A 220 lb person accelerates at 2 m/s². Find force.
- m = 220 × 0.4536 = 99.79 kg
- F = 99.79 × 2 = 199.6 N = 44.8 lbf
Example 3 — Find Mass (m = F/a)
A force of 300 N produces acceleration of 6 m/s². Find mass.
- m = F / a = 300 / 6 = 50 kg
Example 4 — Find Acceleration (a = F/m)
A 1,500 kg car has engine force 4,500 N. Find acceleration.
- a = F / m = 4,500 / 1,500 = 3 m/s²
Example 5 — G-Forces (Rocket / Astronaut)
A rocket accelerates at 3g. Mass = 80 kg. Find force on astronaut.
- a = 3 × 9.81 = 29.43 m/s²
- F = 80 × 29.43 = 2,354 N ≈ 529 lbf (astronaut is pressed with 3× their weight)
Example 6 — Deceleration / Braking
A 1,200 kg car decelerates from 60 km/h to 0 in 4 seconds.
- v_i = 60/3.6 = 16.67 m/s, v_f = 0
- a = (0 − 16.67) / 4 = −4.17 m/s²
- F = 1,200 × (−4.17) = −5,004 N (braking force ≈ 5 kN, opposing motion)
How to Find Net Force — Adding Multiple Forces
Net force (Fnet or ΣF) is the vector sum of all forces acting on an object. Fnet = ΣF determines the actual acceleration via F = ma.
1D Case — All Forces Along One Line
Fnet = F₁ + F₂ + F₃ + ... (with signs: positive = right/up, negative = left/down)
Example — 1D Net Force
- Applied force: +400 N →
- Friction: −150 N ←
- Air resistance: −50 N ←
- Fnet = ΣF = 400 − 150 − 50 = +200 N → (net rightward)
- If m = 40 kg: a = Fnet/m = 200/40 = 5 m/s² →
2D Case — Forces at Angles
Resolve each force into x and y components: Fx = F cosθ, Fy = F sinθ. Then: Fnet = ΣF computed as |Fnet| = √(ΣFx² + ΣFy²), direction = atan2(ΣFy, ΣFx).
Example — 2D Net Force
- Force 1: 100 N at 0° (→); Force 2: 80 N at 90° (↑); Force 3: 60 N at 180° (←)
- Fnet_x = 100cos0° + 80cos90° + 60cos180° = 100 + 0 − 60 = 40 N
- Fnet_y = 100sin0° + 80sin90° + 60sin180° = 0 + 80 + 0 = 80 N
- |Fnet| = √(40² + 80²) = √8,000 = 89.44 N
- θ = atan2(80, 40) = 63.43° above horizontal
Equilibrium: When Fnet = ΣF = 0, the object is in equilibrium (a = 0). If at rest → stays at rest. If moving → continues at constant velocity. Both are Newton's First Law in action.
Applied Force Formula — How to Calculate the Force Needed
The applied force is the force you exert on an object to make it move, accelerate, or overcome friction. The applied force formula depends on the situation:
- Case 1 — Constant velocity: Fapplied = Ffriction = μₖ × mg (net force = 0)
- Case 2 — Accelerating against friction: Fapplied = ma + μₖmg = m(a + μₖg)
- Case 3 — Inclined plane at angle θ: Fapplied = ma + mg sinθ + μₖmg cosθ
| Surface Pair | μₛ (static) | μₖ (kinetic) |
|---|---|---|
| Ice on ice | 0.03 | 0.02 |
| Rubber on ice | 0.15 | 0.10 |
| Wood on wood | 0.40 | 0.30 |
| Steel on steel (dry) | 0.74 | 0.57 |
| Rubber on dry concrete | 0.90 | 0.70 |
| Rubber on wet road | 0.60 | 0.45 |
| Skin on glass | 0.68 | 0.53 |
Example 1 — Constant Velocity
Push 30 kg box at constant velocity on wood floor (μₖ = 0.3).
- Applied force formula: Fapplied = μₖmg
- Fapplied = 0.3 × 30 × 9.81 = 88.3 N
Example 2 — Accelerating Against Friction
Accelerate 30 kg box at 2 m/s² on wood floor (μₖ = 0.3).
- Applied force equation: Fapplied = m(a + μₖg)
- Fapplied = 30 × (2 + 0.3 × 9.81) = 30 × 4.943 = 148.3 N
Example 3 — Inclined Plane
Push 50 kg box up 20° ramp at constant speed (μₖ = 0.25).
- Fapplied = mg(sinθ + μₖcosθ)
- = 50 × 9.81 × (sin20° + 0.25 × cos20°)
- = 490.5 × (0.342 + 0.235) = 490.5 × 0.577 = 283.0 N
The question "how do you find force applied" is answered by identifying whether the object is accelerating or at constant velocity, measuring the friction coefficient, and applying the correct applied force formula above. The horizontal force formula Fapplied = m(a + μₖg) is the most common form used in physics problems.
Newton's Three Laws of Motion — The Foundation of Force
Newton's First Law — Law of Inertia
"An object at rest stays at rest and an object in motion stays in motion at constant velocity unless acted upon by a net external force."
Mathematically: Fnet = 0 → a = 0 → constant velocity (or rest). Example: a book on a table — weight down, normal force up, Fnet = 0.
Newton's Second Law — Law of Acceleration
"The net force on an object equals its mass times its acceleration."
Mathematically: Fnet = ma. This is the core equation of this page. More force = more acceleration. More mass = less acceleration for the same force. Example: car engine providing thrust force → car accelerates.
Newton's Third Law — Law of Action-Reaction
"For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction." FAB = −FBA.
Forces always come in pairs. When you push a wall with 100 N, the wall pushes back with 100 N. When a rocket expels gas backward, gas pushes the rocket forward. Example: swimmer pushes water backward → water pushes swimmer forward.
Types of Force — Weight, Friction, Normal, Tension and More
Weight (Gravitational Force)
W = mg — a special case of F = ma with a = g. Weight always points downward toward Earth's centre. Units are Newtons (N) — NOT kilograms (a very common mistake). Mass is how much matter an object contains; weight is the gravitational force on that mass.
Normal Force
N = mg cosθ on an inclined surface at angle θ; N = mg on a horizontal surface. Always perpendicular to the contact surface.
Friction Force
f = μN = μmg cosθ, opposing motion. Static friction (before sliding): fs ≤ μₛN. Kinetic friction (during sliding): fk = μₖN.
Tension
Force transmitted through a rope, string, or cable. Tension is the same throughout a massless rope. When lifting at constant velocity: T = mg. When accelerating upward: T = m(g + a).
Spring Force — Hooke's Law
F = kx, proportional to extension/compression x. k = spring constant (N/m).
| Force | Approximate Magnitude |
|---|---|
| Ant lifting | ~0.001 N |
| Human finger push | 1–10 N |
| Weight of 1 kg on Earth | 9.81 N |
| Car engine thrust | 2,000–10,000 N |
| Space Shuttle main engines | ~5.8 MN |
| Saturn V rocket (launch) | 35.1 MN |
| Gravitational pull Sun–Earth | 3.54 × 1022 N |
Average Force — Impulse and Momentum (F = Δp/Δt)
The impulse-momentum theorem: J = FΔt = Δp = mΔv = m(v_f − v_i). Rearranged for average force: F_avg = mΔv/Δt = m(v_f − v_i)/Δt.
Key insight: the same momentum change can result from a small force over a long time or a large force over a short time. This is why car airbags save lives — they increase collision time, reducing the average force on the occupant even though the total momentum change is identical.
Example 1 — Catching a Ball
- m = 0.5 kg ball, v_i = 20 m/s, v_f = 0, Δt = 0.1 s
- F = m(v_f − v_i)/Δt = 0.5 × (0 − 20)/0.1 = −100 N (catching force)
Example 2 — Car Crash
- m = 1,500 kg, v_i = 16.67 m/s (60 km/h), v_f = 0, Δt = 0.3 s
- F = 1,500 × (0 − 16.67)/0.3 = −83,333 N = −83.3 kN
- With airbag (Δt = 0.15 s): F = −41,667 N = −41.7 kN (half the force!)
Example 3 — Rocket Thrust
- Exhaust rate Δm/Δt = 10 kg/s, v_exhaust = 2,500 m/s
- Thrust F = (Δm/Δt) × v_exhaust = 10 × 2,500 = 25,000 N = 25 kN
Worked Examples
1. Force on a 70 kg object accelerating at 4 m/s²
- Formula: F = ma
- F = 70 × 4 = 280 N = 0.28 kN = 62.9 lbf
- Check: units kg × m/s² = N ✓
2. Find mass when F = 450 N, a = 9 m/s²
- Formula: m = F/a
- m = 450 / 9 = 50 kg
3. Find acceleration when F = 200 N, m = 25 kg
- Formula: a = F/m
- a = 200 / 25 = 8 m/s²
4. Net force from three forces: +500 N, −200 N, −75 N
- Fnet = ΣF = 500 − 200 − 75 = +225 N (rightward)
5. 2D Net Force: 300 N east, 400 N north
- Fnet_x = 300 N, Fnet_y = 400 N
- |Fnet| = √(300² + 400²) = √250,000 = 500 N
- θ = atan2(400, 300) = 53.13° above east (north-east)
6. Weight of 60 kg person on Earth and Moon
- W = mg — mass stays constant at 60 kg everywhere
- Earth: W = 60 × 9.807 = 588.4 N (132.3 lbf)
- Moon: W = 60 × 1.62 = 97.2 N (21.9 lbf) — same mass, different weight!
7. Applied force to push 40 kg box at constant speed, μₖ = 0.3
- Applied force formula (constant velocity): Fapplied = μₖmg
- Fapplied = 0.3 × 40 × 9.81 = 117.7 N
8. Applied force to accelerate 40 kg box at 3 m/s², μₖ = 0.3
- Applied force equation: Fapplied = m(a + μₖg)
- Fapplied = 40 × (3 + 0.3 × 9.81) = 40 × 5.943 = 237.7 N
9. Average force on 0.2 kg ball: 15 m/s → −10 m/s in 0.05 s
- Δv = v_f − v_i = −10 − 15 = −25 m/s
- F = mΔv/Δt = 0.2 × (−25) / 0.05 = −100 N
- Impulse J = FΔt = 100 × 0.05 = 5 N·s
10. Force to lift 500 kg elevator at constant speed
- Constant speed → a = 0 → Fnet = 0
- Tension T = Weight = mg = 500 × 9.81 = 4,905 N (4.905 kN)
- Tension exactly equals weight — no net force, Newton's First Law
Frequently Asked Questions
Related Calculators
| Unit | = Newtons |
|---|---|
| 1 kN | 1,000 N |
| 1 MN | 106 N |
| 1 lbf | 4.448 N |
| 1 kgf | 9.807 N |
| 1 dyne | 10−5 N |
| Planet | g (m/s²) |
|---|---|
| 🌍 Earth | 9.807 |
| 🌕 Moon | 1.62 |
| 🔴 Mars | 3.72 |
| 🟤 Jupiter | 24.79 |
| ☿ Mercury | 3.70 |
| 🟡 Venus | 8.87 |
| 🪐 Saturn | 10.44 |
| ☀️ Sun | 274.0 |
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