Meter : Distance = Newton : Force
Work = 1 newton-meter = 1 joule
There are 100 c-newton meters in a newton meter.
The force is 1 newton. The work done is 1 newton-meter = 1 joule.
The exact date of the Newton Meter is unknown, but it was in the mid 1600's. Sir Isaac newton was the founder of the Newton Meter.
The Joule. It is defined as the energy required to exert a force of 1 Newton, for a distance of 1 meter.
Newton meter is a measure of energy, E= fd, Energy equals .Newton (force) times meter(distance)
newton meter.
Work = 1 newton-meter = 1 joule
1 newton-meter = 1 joule
Newton.meter is a work unit; where newton is a force unit and meter is a distance unit (in SI unit system).
"KiloNewton Meter" is a unit of energy, not distance. If you had to measure a distance,this unit would be quite useless.The basic unit of energy is one Joule, which is the same as one newton-meter. It's the energydelivered by a force of one newton pushing through a distance of one meter.1,000 of these might be labeled "One KiloNewton Meter".
Force . . . . . . . . . kilogram-meter per second2 = newton Distance. . . . . . . meter Work, Energy. . . newton-meter = joule Power . . . . . . . . joule per second = watt Time. . . . . . . . . . second
Well, look at this formula: Work = Force*Distance Force is in Newtons, Distance in meters and Work in Joules. So if we replace it as: 1=1d or 1=d this means distance has to be one meter for 1 newton to equal one joule, so it depends on the distance, if it is not one meter then 1 newton does not equal 1 joule.
There are 100 c-newton meters in a newton meter.
Work is the amount of energy transferred by a force across a distance. Work = force x distance The unit for work is the Joule (J), which is defined as 1 newton x 1 meter, or 1 newton-meter (Nm) in the SI system.
The exact date of the Newton Meter is unknown, but it was in the mid 1600's. Sir Isaac Newton was the founder of the Newton Meter.
one jule