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PhysicsKid0123
- 95
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So I am kind of confused about the role of force when calculating work. Specifically, when defining work using a line integral. There is a paragraph in my calculus book that is really throwing me off and its really bugging me so much I can't continue reading unless I fully understand what's going on. It is the part where it talks about how "For a curve C in space, we define the work done by a continuous force field F to move an object along C from a point A to another point B as follows." Here, the curve C is defined by r(t) = g(t)i + h(t)j + k(t)k. I'll link a picture of what it says. My problem is how can such a force field specifically move an object from point A to a point B. Isn't this only true when the magnitudes of the i components in both r and F are greater than the magnitudes of the j and k components. I am aware that when a force is applied perpendicularly to motion, there is zero work. When force is opposed to motion work is negative. When force is in the direction of motion work is positive. Force can initiate motion when an objecting is "stationary," and so this object moves in the direction of the force. To better understand my question, r(t) defines the definite position function of a particle (kind of like a train following the train tracks), but if r(t) is completely opposed to the force field for all of time t, how does it move it from a point A at t = 0 to a point B at t = t* where t* >0. Doesn't the position function r(t) imply that it has it's own velocity and acceleration vectors (from derivatives) which is what gives rise to motion and thus the ability to travel through the curve from A to B, separate from the influence of the force field. Furthermore, isn't the force field that acts on such a particle that is moving on it's definite fixed path or curve C merely just changing the speed at which the particle travels? For example, in one of the pictures there is a curve that has a loop. In the part of the loop where the particle travels against the force(when the velocity vector and force vector at that point in space are parallel and opposing), it slows down, but when it turns back around in the opposite direction it accelerates again. If the force field is the only thing to initiate motion and perpetually "move an object along C from a point A to another point B" it will not always be able to move it to point B. For example, if the particle has a path in the direction of the force field then takes a 180 degree turn shortly after and follows a very long path opposing the field before turning back around to approach the point B again, it will not have gained the momentum or velocity to do so since the force would have slowed it down and perhaps sent it back to A. The paragraph is implying that the force is dictating the position function r(t). Meaning that r(t) does not have a fixed position function and is free to move along the force field F.
What kind of other implications could arise if we solely define r(t) to be simply a curve C not necessarily a position function, or is it always going to describe a position function of some sort? (I always think of a particle's position, which may not always be true and perhaps be applied to other things.)
What kind of other implications could arise if we solely define r(t) to be simply a curve C not necessarily a position function, or is it always going to describe a position function of some sort? (I always think of a particle's position, which may not always be true and perhaps be applied to other things.)
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