joules
Chaz Stroman
The product of Newtons and meters is known as Newton-meters, which is a unit of energy or work. It can also be referred to as joules in the International System of Units (SI).
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∙ 15y agoNot just newtons, but newton-meters, also known as a Joule
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∙ 12y agoA unit of torque, simply called Newton-meters.
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∙ 6y ago1.0 Newton-meter = 1.0 Joule
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∙ 14y ago1 newton-meter is 1 Joule
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∙ 6y agoIt is a Joule.
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∙ 6y agoalso called joules
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∙ 11y agojoules
No, the result of multiplying Newtons by meters is not a valid unit in physics. Newtons represent a unit of force, while meters represent a unit of distance. If you multiply Newtons by meters, you get Newton-meters, which represents a unit of work or energy, also known as a joule.
No, multiplying meters and Newtons does not result in joules. Joules are a unit of energy, while meters measure distance and Newtons measure force. To calculate work, which is in joules, you would need to multiply force (in Newtons) by distance (in meters) in the direction of the force.
To convert Newtons to Joules, you multiply the force in Newtons by the distance in meters over which the force is applied. Joules are a unit of energy, and when you multiply force (in Newtons) by distance (in meters), you get work done, which is measured in Joules.
Meters / second2, or the equivalent Newtons / kg.Meters / second2, or the equivalent Newtons / kg.Meters / second2, or the equivalent Newtons / kg.Meters / second2, or the equivalent Newtons / kg.
The question does not make sense. The newton and newton meter are different units, so: for a force of 120 newton meters, you can have a 10 newtons over 12 meters, 5 newtons over 24 meters, 0.5 newtons over 240 meters, 50 newtons over 2.4 meters, and so on.
588N * 12m= 7056J
2,000 newtons
No, the result of multiplying Newtons by meters is not a valid unit in physics. Newtons represent a unit of force, while meters represent a unit of distance. If you multiply Newtons by meters, you get Newton-meters, which represents a unit of work or energy, also known as a joule.
No, multiplying meters and Newtons does not result in joules. Joules are a unit of energy, while meters measure distance and Newtons measure force. To calculate work, which is in joules, you would need to multiply force (in Newtons) by distance (in meters) in the direction of the force.
To convert Newtons to Joules, you multiply the force in Newtons by the distance in meters over which the force is applied. Joules are a unit of energy, and when you multiply force (in Newtons) by distance (in meters), you get work done, which is measured in Joules.
Meters / second2, or the equivalent Newtons / kg.Meters / second2, or the equivalent Newtons / kg.Meters / second2, or the equivalent Newtons / kg.Meters / second2, or the equivalent Newtons / kg.
Usually meters, kilograms, and Newtons.
The question does not make sense. The newton and newton meter are different units, so: for a force of 120 newton meters, you can have a 10 newtons over 12 meters, 5 newtons over 24 meters, 0.5 newtons over 240 meters, 50 newtons over 2.4 meters, and so on.
2000 Newtons
The result is 2800 kg*m/s, which represents momentum.
Usually meters, kilograms, and Newtons.
Torque is definitely NOT reported in percentage. It is reported in newtons-meters, or any other combination of force times distance.