mass and accerlation
No, a moment is a force x a distance, it is the product of a force and a distance. You get the same moment with a force of say 2 Newtons at 0.5 meter as a force of 1 Newton at 1 meter, so it is obviously not a force alone, but the product of a force and a distance, and its units are Newton.meters in the SI system
Newton's 2nd Law is Force equals Mass times Acceleration, or F=ma.
as work done is dot product of force and displacement so cos(90)=0;therfore work done is zero
F=ma, or force equals the product of mass and acceleration. Assuming that the mass of the object does not change, then acceleration increases as force increases.
Force is got by the product of mass and acceleration. So unit has to be kg m s-2 But it is simplified as newton and written as N. So force is measured in newton. If 4 N and 3 N act perpendicular to each other then the resultant will be 5 N.
time
IT IS A SHOE COMPANY LIKE "AIR FORCE ONES"
The dot product of force and velocity gives the power generated by the force on the object. It is calculated as the product of the magnitudes of force and velocity, multiplied by the cosine of the angle between them. This represents the rate at which work is done on the object by the force.
The product of force and time is impulse, which is a measure of the change in momentum of an object. It is calculated by multiplying force by the time over which the force acts on the object.
Impulse is the product of a force and the time interval during which that force acts. It represents the change in momentum of an object.
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Impulse
Work - or energy transferred is the product of force and the distance that the object moves in the direction of the force.
Work is the product of force and the distance through which the force continues before it quits.It really doesn't directly involve any characteristics of the object upon which the force acts.
The product of force and velocity is called mechanical power. It is a measure of how quickly work is being done by a force on an object in motion.
Work is the product of force and displacement, where force is the effort applied to move an object and displacement is the distance the object moves in the direction of the force. The formula for work is: Work = Force x Displacement x cos(theta), where theta is the angle between the force and displacement vectors.
Work is the scalar product of the force acting on an object and the displacement caused by that force. In order for work to be done, the object must be moved in the direction of the force.