There is no such thing as an amount of force needed to move a certain distance
or a certain direction. Asteroids, comets, moons, and planets have been moving
trillions of miles through space for billions of years with either no force on them
at all, or no force in the direction they're moving.
You may have heard of Newton's First Law. It says that an object with no forces
acting on it keeps moving in a straight line at a constant speed, which is kind of
another good way of saying that it can move as far as you want it to with no force
on it.
There is no such thing as an amount of force needed to move a certain distance or a certain direction. Asteroids, comets, moons, and planets have been moving trillions of miles through space for billions of years with either no force on them at all, or no force in the direction they're moving. You may have heard of Newton's First Law. It says that an object with no forces acting on it keeps moving in a straight line at a constant speed, which is kind of another good way of saying that it can move as far as you want it to with no force on it.
No, work is related to energy, not to force.
There is no such term, because the distance an object moves does not directly depend on the force that acts on it.
An inclineded plane
Simple
There is no such thing as an amount of force needed to move a certain distance or a certain direction. Asteroids, comets, moons, and planets have been moving trillions of miles through space for billions of years with either no force on them at all, or no force in the direction they're moving. You may have heard of Newton's First Law. It says that an object with no forces acting on it keeps moving in a straight line at a constant speed, which is kind of another good way of saying that it can move as far as you want it to with no force on it.
No, work is related to energy, not to force.
Energy. The unit of measure for energy is the Newton (N).
There is no such term, because the distance an object moves does not directly depend on the force that acts on it.
An inclineded plane
Simple
An inclineded plane
Simple
There is no such thing as an amount of force needed to move a certain distance. Asteroids, comets, moons, and planets have been moving trillions of miles through space for billions of years with either no force on them at all, or no force in the direction they're moving. You may have heard of Newton's First Law. It says that an object with no forces acting on it keeps moving in a straight line at a constant speed, which is kind of another good way of saying that it can move as far as you want it to with no force on it.
Simple
You can use a force meter to measure the amount of force needed to pull a toy car towards you.
the anemometer was created because they needed to see how fast the wind was going and what direction it was going also they needed to measure the weather