The drag force acting on a car travelling at a speed v is given by the equation F=kAv^2

Where A is the area of the front of the car.
Show that a suitable unit for the quantity k is kgm-3.
Mark scheme answer:
F= kgms-2
or
A=m2
V=ms-1

Which is K=kgm-3

I am confused could someone show the working out clearly involving all steps and equations used.
Please help.

To find a suitable unit for the quantity "k" in the equation F = kAv^2, we can start by looking at the units of each variable in the equation.

F represents force, and its standard unit is Newton (N), which is equivalent to kg·m/s^2.

A represents the area of the front of the car, and its standard unit is square meters (m^2).

V represents the velocity or speed of the car, and its standard unit is meters per second (m/s).

Now, let's substitute the units into the equation:

F = kAv^2

(N) = k(m^2)(m/s)^2

To make the equation mathematically correct, we need to verify if the units on both sides of the equation are equivalent.

On the left-hand side, we have N (Newtons), which is equal to kg·m/s^2.

On the right-hand side, we have k(m^2)(m/s)^2. Expanding this further, we get:

k(m^2)(m/s)^2 = k(m^2)(m^2/s^2)

Now, in order for the equation to balance, the units on both sides must be equal. Therefore:

kg·m/s^2 = k(m^2)(m^2/s^2)

To simplify the right side of the equation, we can cancel out the terms:

kg·m/s^2 = k(m^2)⋅(m^2/s^2)

kg·m/s^2 = k(m^4/s^2)

The only way the equation balances is if:

k = kg/m^3

Therefore, a suitable unit for the quantity "k" is kg/m^3.