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Calculate the energy required to raise the person (weight x height). Then divide that energy by the time, to get power.
There's no limit to the height of the stairs, but because power is the rate of doing work, different people would run up several flights of stairs at different rates, since each person has a "limit" on the amount of power she/she can produce.
Strength.
800 W
NO ANSWER?!....This is unacceptable in this organization. -.-
Calculate the energy required to raise the person (weight x height). Then divide that energy by the time, to get power.
I believe that the amount of power/energy you exert on yourself climbing up the stairs is wasted, and the faster you go, the faster the power is used up. It takes a lot of energy to go up one flight of stairs than it does going down five or so, depending on the body type of the person and maybe even the amount of gravity in that specific area.
You would expend 2 watts of power when you exert a force of 1N that moves a book 2m in a time interval of 1s.
Yes, in small circles. They exert force on locals when not in the prescence of coallition troops.
a lot
amount of force you can exert on a object, e.g camels and cows are actually chickens.
his force is clearly 200N
1 Watt
There's no limit to the height of the stairs, but because power is the rate of doing work, different people would run up several flights of stairs at different rates, since each person has a "limit" on the amount of power she/she can produce.
Whether you walk or run you are still lifting the mass of your body through the same height against gravity, so the amount of work done is equal in each case, but where the work is done in less time more power is required. Yes, you exert more power when you run up the stairs.
40 N
Strength.