Work is applied to an object and the object is moved over a distance in the same direction of the applied force.
There is no such thing as an amount of force needed to move a certain distance. Asteroids, comets, moons, and planets have been moving trillions of miles through space for billions of years with either no force on them at all, or no force in the direction they're moving. You may have heard of Newton's First Law. It says that an object with no forces acting on it keeps moving in a straight line at a constant speed, which is kind of another good way of saying that it can move as far as you want it to with no force on it.
Work
Work
When you exert a force on an object that causes the object to move some distance .
There is no such term, because the distance an object moves does not directly depend on the force that acts on it.
Work is done when a force is used to move an object.Work = force x distance.
No, work is related to energy, not to force.
effort
work
dont knoww
As a simplified explanation, work = force x distance. You need to apply a force over a certain distance, for work to be done.
work= force × distance so if an object moves 4metres, and the force to move it is 2N, (Newtons) the work done would be 4 × 2 = 8Joules (Work is measured in Joules) In other words, work is done when an object moves a certain distance when a certain amount of force is applied to it.
The process of a force acting through a distance is called "work". It doesn't have to involve moving an object. Like for example, stretching a rubber band is work.
Move a certain distance since Work Done=Fd
Mechanical energy is transferred by a force to a moving object.
No. Only when there is also movement. The basic formula for work is: work = force x distance If a certain force is applied along a certain distance, then work is done.