This question cannot be answered in a sensible way. A Newton metre (or Joule) is a measure of energy or work, with dimensions [L2MT-2]. An inch is a measure of length, with dimensions [L]. Basic dimensional analysis teaches that you cannot convert between measures with different dimensions without additional information.
Newton is the unit for Force, which is mass (kg) x acceleration (m/s/s). Torque is the force apply to a circular motion. If you have a wheel with 1 meter radius and you apply 1 Newton of force to make it turn. The Torque would be 1 N x 1 M = 1 NM.
A 50.0 kg object is accelerated at 10 m/s square. What is the force acting on the object?
You don't. "Work" has the same units as energy (joules), whereas newtons is a unit of force.
joules
Newtons measure weight and force. meters measure length. so the answer is 0
Answer: 779,000,000 km = 484,048,158.8 miles
6.5 km = 6500 mTo convert from km to m, multiply by 1000.
For every 1 kilometer there is 1000 meters so therefore 1260 kilometers multiply by 1000 meters is 1260000 meters.
Multiply the number of miles by 1.6 to get to kilometers, which is the metric system measurement for long distance.
you get torque. N/m
Convert this to kilograms, then multiply with the gravity (9.82 meters per square second). The result will be in Newtons.Convert this to kilograms, then multiply with the gravity (9.82 meters per square second). The result will be in Newtons.Convert this to kilograms, then multiply with the gravity (9.82 meters per square second). The result will be in Newtons.Convert this to kilograms, then multiply with the gravity (9.82 meters per square second). The result will be in Newtons.
To find joules, you have to multiply the force or newtons by distance in meters.
Multiply the mass (in kilograms) by the gravitation (9.8 meters per second square, near the Earth's surface), and you get the weight (in Newtons).
You usually do this to calculate a weight. In this case, multiply the number of kilograms by the force of gravity - in case of Earth, this is about 9.8 meters/second2.
You multiply the mass by the gravity. Normal Earth gravity is about 9.8 (in meters/second2, or the equivalent newton/kilogram).
Meters / second2, or the equivalent Newtons / kg.Meters / second2, or the equivalent Newtons / kg.Meters / second2, or the equivalent Newtons / kg.Meters / second2, or the equivalent Newtons / kg.
The idea is to multiply the mass by the velocity.
Multiply the force by the distance. The mass is irrelevant for this problem.
Multiply mass in kilograms by 9.81 to get weight in Newtons
Multiply the mass by the gravitation. On Earth, gravitation is about 9.8 meters per second square, or the equivalent 9.8 newton per kilogram.
For a constant force, work = force x distance. In other words, just multiply the two. The answer is in joules.