Question 1 10 pts You push your physics book 0.5 m along a horizontal table top with a horizontal push of 18.1 N while the opposing force of friction is 1 N. How much is the net work done on the book? the answer has the unit of J.
Added by Allen H.
Close
Step 1
The work done by a force is given by the equation: work = force x distance. In this case, the applied force is 18.1 N and the distance is 0.5 m. So, the work done by the applied force is: work = 18.1 N x 0.5 m = 9.05 J. Show more…
Show all steps
Your feedback will help us improve your experience
Jaya M and 76 other Physics 103 educators are ready to help you.
Ask a new question
Labs
Want to see this concept in action?
Explore this concept interactively to see how it behaves as you change inputs.
Key Concepts
Recommended Videos
A book is pushed 1.20m along a horizontal table with a horizontal force of 3N. The opposing force of friction of 0.6N. a.) How much work does the 3N force do on the book? b.) What is the work done on the book by the friction force? c.) What is the total work done on the book?
Madhur L.
You push your physics book $1.10 \mathrm{~m}$ along a horizontal tabletop with a horizontal push of $3.00 \mathrm{~N}$ while the opposing force of friction is $0.700 \mathrm{~N}$. How much work does each of the following forces do on the book: (a) your $3.00-\mathrm{N}$ push, (b) the friction force, (c) the normal force from the tabletop, and (d) gravity? (e) What is the net work done on the book?
$\cdot$ You push your physics book 1.50 $\mathrm{m}$ along a horizontal tabletop with a horizontal push of 2.40 $\mathrm{N}$ while the opposing force of friction is 0.600 $\mathrm{N} .$ How much work does each of the following forces do on the book? (a) your 2.40 $\mathrm{N}$ push, (b) the friction force, (c) the normal force from the table, and (d) grav- ity? (e) What is the net work done on the book?
Recommended Textbooks
University Physics with Modern Physics
Physics: Principles with Applications
Fundamentals of Physics
18,000,000+
Students on Numerade
Trusted by students at 8,000+ universities
Watch the video solution with this free unlock.
EMAIL
PASSWORD