You don't MODIFY any of his laws; you just use the formula to calculate the gravitational force, plugging in the numbers for masses and distance. Usually the masses would be in kilograms, the distance in meters, and the result in newton.
You can calculate this by plugging in the distance (in meters), and the masses (in kilograms), into the Universal Law of Gravitation.According to Wolfram Alpha, that would be 3.829 x 10 to the power 23 newton.
To calculate work done, use the formula: Work = Force x Distance. Substitute the values into the formula: Work = 2.5 N x 7 m = 17.5 Joules. Therefore, the work done to move the dresser 7 meters using a force of 2.5 Newtons is 17.5 Joules.
There are 100 c-newton meters in a newton meter.
To convert newton meters to foot pounds, you can use the conversion factor: 1 newton meter is equal to 0.737562 foot pounds. So, to convert, you would multiply the number of newton meters by 0.737562 to get the equivalent in foot pounds.
Newton meters. (nm)
You don't MODIFY any of his laws; you just use the formula to calculate the gravitational force, plugging in the numbers for masses and distance. Usually the masses would be in kilograms, the distance in meters, and the result in newton.
Distance * Weight (in Newton meters)
Work done is measured in newton meters because work is the product of force and distance, and both force and distance are measured in newtons and meters, respectively. Therefore, the unit for work done is newton meters (Nm) to appropriately represent the product of these two physical quantities.
You can't. Newton-meters are a unit of force. Meters are a unit of distance. The two are not directly related.
No, newton meters do not measure in kilograms. Newton meters measure torque or work, which is the product of a force in newtons and a distance in meters. Kilograms measure mass, not force or work.
The work done is 2 joules. Work is calculated by multiplying the force exerted (1 newton) by the distance moved in the direction of the force (2 meters).
You can calculate this by plugging in the distance (in meters), and the masses (in kilograms), into the Universal Law of Gravitation.According to Wolfram Alpha, that would be 3.829 x 10 to the power 23 newton.
To calculate the work done, you would multiply the force applied (2.5 N) by the distance moved (7 m). Work = Force x Distance. So, the work done to move the dresser 7 meters with a force of 2.5 newtons would be 17.5 joules.
Work = force x distance = (4 x 10) = 40 newton-meters = 40 joules
torque
joules