joules is energy, not a force
10^-7 joule
There are 0.7376 foot-pounds of force in a joule.
One joule is 0.239 calories.
J is unit of energy, N is unit of force.So there is no Newtons in Joule. Newton*Displacement=Joule
You could have 'newton-centimeters', or 'newton-inches', or 'pound meters' etc., but you can't have 'newton pounds'. Torque is (a distance) x (a force), but 'newton pound' is (force) x (force). Whether or not that has any physical significance at all, it's surely not torque.
10^-7 joule
There are 0.7376 foot-pounds of force in a joule.
1 pound of force = 4.448 newtons (rounded)
1 Newton is 1 joule/meter.
1 kilonewton = 224.81 pounds of force.
One joule is 0.239 calories.
J is unit of energy, N is unit of force.So there is no Newtons in Joule. Newton*Displacement=Joule
38 pounds of force = 169 newtons (rounded)
That is why both work and energy are measured in Joules. To do the work I applied a force (equal to the weight of the book) to the book from the floor to the tabletop.Workequals the force times the distance, in units of Newtons times Meters. Therefore 1 Newton-Meter (NM) equals 1 Joule.
You could have 'newton-centimeters', or 'newton-inches', or 'pound meters' etc., but you can't have 'newton pounds'. Torque is (a distance) x (a force), but 'newton pound' is (force) x (force). Whether or not that has any physical significance at all, it's surely not torque.
A Newton.meter is a Joule, that is how a Joule is defined! I think it is normally written N.m, to show it is the product of Newton and meter
You have the wrong understanding of millimeters. A Newton.meter is a unit of work, it is called the Joule in the SI system. A millimeter is a distance, equal to 1/1000 of a meter.