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183_notes:work_by_nc_forces [2014/10/03 21:09] – created caballero | 183_notes:work_by_nc_forces [2021/03/12 02:34] (current) – [Work Done by Non-Constant Forces] stumptyl | ||
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+ | Section 6.3 in Matter and Interactions (4th edition) | ||
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===== Work Done by Non-Constant Forces ===== | ===== Work Done by Non-Constant Forces ===== | ||
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+ | Until now, the [[183_notes: | ||
+ | ==== Lecture Video ==== | ||
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+ | {{youtube> | ||
+ | ==== Work done in small steps ==== | ||
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+ | [{{183_notes: | ||
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+ | Consider a particle that is moving along a curved path where the force changes at every instant in some way. The particle moves from an initial location to a final location, and you want to calculate the work acting on that particle over the entire path. | ||
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+ | You could do this cutting up the path into little chunks and determining the work done in each chunk. The average force on the particle at that point in the path is →F1. Over that small interval the work done in the first chunk is, | ||
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+ | W1=→F1⋅Δ→r1 | ||
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+ | Each chunk would contribute a small amount, so that the total work could be estimated by, | ||
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+ | Wtotal=W1+W2+W3+⋯=→F1⋅Δ→r1+→F2⋅Δ→r2+→F3⋅Δ→r3+⋯=N∑i=l→Fi⋅Δ→ri | ||
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+ | ==== General Definition of Work done by a Force ==== | ||
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+ | If we make each chunk smaller (and thus have more chunks), the estimate would get better. In the limit that the chunks become infinitesimally small, the sum becomes an integral along the path. | ||
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+ | Wtotal=∫fi→F⋅d→r | ||
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+ | This is the general definition of the work done by a force. It is true even if the force isn't constant and if the path is curved. In this class, you will usually use it in only one-dimension, | ||
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+ | Wtotal=∫xfxiFxdx | ||
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+ | Don't get hung up on the choice of the x-direction here, it's just meant to communicate that the integral is calculated along a single dimension because the object increases its velocity component in only one direction. | ||
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+ | ==== Example ==== | ||
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+ | * [[183_notes: |