20N times 5m equals 100 NewtonMetres, or 100 Joules.
Work = (force) x (distance)Work = (33N) x (13m) = 429 N-m = 429 joulesIF the force is in exactly the same direction as the motion of the wagon.
Calculate the distance first. Then multiply distance x force.
100 n
You are supposed to multiply force x distance.
Gravitational force pulls downward. If you take the upward direction as positive, then any force that pulls downward will be negative. It is a matter of definitions; you can just as well define up as negative, and down as positive. It doesn't really matter much, one way or the other.
a lot
Work = (force) x (distance)Work = (33N) x (13m) = 429 N-m = 429 joulesIF the force is in exactly the same direction as the motion of the wagon.
Calculate the distance first. Then multiply distance x force.
The simplistic solution is as follows: The component of the force in the horizontal plane is 41.8*cos(25) = 37.9 N. The distance travelled is pi*18 metres so work done = 37.9*18 = 2142 Joules.
too much water in the cloud
100 n
7,071 J
I'm not aware of the schooner wagon being faster. However, the difference I am aware of is the schooner wagon used no draft animals to pull it. Instead it had a sail and the wind provided the force to propel the wagon, much like a ship at sea.
Well... i think that upthrust is a force that pushes things upwards and dnsity is how much something weighs... or the force that pulls something downwards...or how much heavy something is
4,000
Force = mass x acceleration Force = Akg x 2m/s^2 Unit for force here is in Newtons (N)
The force of the hammer is much greater than the force of the nail. Gravity pulls down the hammer, hits the nail, and the nail forces up, but the force of gravity wins over the force pulling on the nail.