That's the "Input Work".
Work = force x distance traveled (only when the force and distance are acting in the same direction)
In a machine with a mechanical advantage of 3, the output force is exerted over a shorter distance compared to the distance over which the input force is exerted. The output force is three times greater than the input force but is exerted over a third of the distance traveled by the input force due to the principle of work conservation.
The product of the force and the distance is called "work". It is equivalent to a transfer of mechanical energy.
For work to happen, there needs to be a force applied to an object and the object must move in the direction of the force. Work is calculated as the product of force and distance moved in the direction of the force.
In physics, work is defined as the energy transferred to or from an object by means of a force acting on the object as it moves through a distance. Mathematically, work is calculated as the product of the force applied to an object and the distance over which the force is exerted in the direction of the force.
Work = force x distance traveled (only when the force and distance are acting in the same direction)
In a machine with a mechanical advantage of 3, the output force is exerted over a shorter distance compared to the distance over which the input force is exerted. The output force is three times greater than the input force but is exerted over a third of the distance traveled by the input force due to the principle of work conservation.
force * distance = work
The product of the force and the distance is called "work". It is equivalent to a transfer of mechanical energy.
For work to happen, there needs to be a force applied to an object and the object must move in the direction of the force. Work is calculated as the product of force and distance moved in the direction of the force.
In physics, work is defined as the energy transferred to or from an object by means of a force acting on the object as it moves through a distance. Mathematically, work is calculated as the product of the force applied to an object and the distance over which the force is exerted in the direction of the force.
Work. Work is the term used to describe the force applied to an object that results in its displacement over a distance. Work is calculated by multiplying the force applied by the distance moved in the direction of the force.
Work W. The dot product of Force and Distance through which the force acts is called Work . W=F.d
work
all forces are either a push or a pull. even over a distance. gravity is a pull and its opposing force, upthrust, is a push or for ipc its work
That's the definition of "work" ... (force exerted) times (distance through which the force acts). If you push against the end of a lever with a force 'F' and move it through a distance 'D', then (F x D) is the work you put into the lever.
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.