- #1
lmelbye
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Hello everybody
Normally you say that the unit of torque is Nm but could also be (Nm)/°.?
I'm claiming this because of the fact that you normally do not give radians any unit, and that is why you just write Nm and not (Nm)/rad.
SI claims that: "torque may be thought of as the cross product of force and distance, suggesting the unit Newton metre, or it may be thought of as energy per angle, suggesting the unit joule per radian"
http://www.bipm.org/en/si/si_brochure/chapter2/2-2/2-2-2.html
We have:
Force*distance=energy =>
[Nm] = [J] which leads to:
[J/rad] = [Nm]/[rad]
So, am I right when I say that unit of torque could be Nm as well as (Nm)/°?
Normally you say that the unit of torque is Nm but could also be (Nm)/°.?
I'm claiming this because of the fact that you normally do not give radians any unit, and that is why you just write Nm and not (Nm)/rad.
SI claims that: "torque may be thought of as the cross product of force and distance, suggesting the unit Newton metre, or it may be thought of as energy per angle, suggesting the unit joule per radian"
http://www.bipm.org/en/si/si_brochure/chapter2/2-2/2-2-2.html
We have:
Force*distance=energy =>
[Nm] = [J] which leads to:
[J/rad] = [Nm]/[rad]
So, am I right when I say that unit of torque could be Nm as well as (Nm)/°?
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