Consider a lady pushing a luggage cart as she moves. The external force exerted by her accelerates the cart in the direction of the applied force. If she pushes with a greater force, the cart will move faster. To stop the cart, she needs to apply an external force in the direction opposite to her motion. If she places more luggage on the cart, the same force produces a smaller acceleration in the direction of the net external force. Compiling these, we get Newton's second law of motion, which states that an object accelerates proportionally and in the direction of the net external force and inversely to its mass. Or, the net external force acting on an object is the product of its mass and its acceleration. All accelerating objects follow Newton's second law.