Transfer of energy is called work.
Yes it is.
torque
force and energy
The product of the force and the distance is called "work". It is equivalent to a transfer of mechanical energy.
The product of force x distance is called work. It is basically a transfer of energy.
Assuming you are referring to mechanical energy:Work or energy (work can be thought of as a transfer of energy) is force x distance. Power is energy / time. Thus, power is force x distance / time Which is equivalent to: power is force x speed
torque
Force x distance = energy. (Transfer of energy is usually called "work", but the two concepts are related.)
force and energy
Yes - quite different. Energy has dimensions of force x distance - if you apply a force over a certain distance, you transfer a certain amount of energy.
The product of the force and the distance is called "work". It is equivalent to a transfer of mechanical energy.
The product of force x distance is called work. It is basically a transfer of energy.
Assuming you are referring to mechanical energy:Work or energy (work can be thought of as a transfer of energy) is force x distance. Power is energy / time. Thus, power is force x distance / time Which is equivalent to: power is force x speed
The transfer of energy that occurs when a force makes an object move is called work. Work is a quantity of energy given in the unit of Joules. The mathematical description of work is the product of the force and the distance for which it was applied.
Yes. Work can also be understood as a transfer of energy.
The transfer of energy that occurs when a force makes an object move is called work. Work is a quantity of energy given in the unit of Joules. The mathematical description of work is the product of the force and the distance for which it was applied.
Force changes motion, according to Newton's Second Law (force = mass x acceleration). Applying a force over a distance requires work (= energy transfer); in the simplest case, this work is equal to force x distance.
Basically, the product of force x distance is called "work". It is expressed in units of energy. I like to think of work as "energy transfer", but this only applies to mechanical energy. In fact, it requires energy to do such work. In the SI, if you multiply a distance in meters by a force in newtons, you get a work in joules.