Yes, work is done when you pull a child in a wagon because you are applying a force over a distance to move the wagon and the child. Work is calculated as force multiplied by distance.
When it feels like it
A wagon at the top of a hill will do work when it moves downhill due to the force of gravity pulling it downward. Work is done when a force acts on an object to move it over a distance in the direction of the force, which occurs as the wagon descends the hill.
The energy used when pulling a wagon is muscular energy generated by your muscles. Your muscles contract and exert force to move the wagon, converting chemical energy stored in your body into mechanical energy to do work.
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.
The work done by the elephant while moving the circus wagon can be calculated using the formula: Work = Force x Distance. If the pulling force exerted by the elephant is known, the work done can be calculated by multiplying the force by the distance of 20 meters.
When it feels like it
A wagon at the top of a hill will do work when it moves downhill due to the force of gravity pulling it downward. Work is done when a force acts on an object to move it over a distance in the direction of the force, which occurs as the wagon descends the hill.
a lot
The energy used when pulling a wagon is muscular energy generated by your muscles. Your muscles contract and exert force to move the wagon, converting chemical energy stored in your body into mechanical energy to do work.
Depends... they are doing the same amount of work on the wagon/child. HOwever, if you take everything into account... say the diffrent masses of the father and mother, then the bigger of the two would be doing more work.
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.
The work done by the elephant while moving the circus wagon can be calculated using the formula: Work = Force x Distance. If the pulling force exerted by the elephant is known, the work done can be calculated by multiplying the force by the distance of 20 meters.
Distance * Force / Calories
The work done by the elephant can be calculated using the formula: work = force x distance. Therefore, the work done by the elephant in moving the circus wagon 20 meters while pulling a force of 200N would be 4000 Joules.
The work done in pulling the wagon is 1500 J. The force exerted can be calculated using the work-energy principle: Work = Force * Distance. So, Force = Work / Distance. Plugging in the values, Force = 1500 J / 20 m = 75 N.
The work done by an elephant while moving the circus wagon can be calculated as the product of the force applied (200N) and the distance moved (20m), which gives a total work of 4000 joules.
Check the fuse for the wipers. Otherwise the wiper motor is probably done for.