In U.S. standard units, we measure the magnitude of force
in pounds. The magnitude of the displacement vector
tells us how far the object moved, and it is measured in feet. The customary unit of measure for work, then, is the foot-pound. One foot-pound is the amount of work required to move an object weighing 1 lb a distance of 1 ft straight up. In the metric system, the unit of measure for force is the newton (N), and the unit of measure of magnitude for work is a newton-meter (N·m), or a joule (J).
Calculating work
A conveyor belt generates a force
that moves a suitcase from point
to point
along a straight line. Find the work done by the conveyor belt. The distance is measured in meters and the force is measured in newtons.
The displacement vector
has initial point
and terminal point
Work is the dot product of force and displacement:
The dot product, or scalar product, of two vectors
and
is
The dot product satisfies the following properties:
The dot product of two vectors can be expressed, alternatively, as
This form of the dot product is useful for finding the measure of the angle formed by two vectors.
Vectors
u and
v are orthogonal if
The angles formed by a nonzero vector and the coordinate axes are called the
direction angles for the vector. The cosines of these angles are known as the
direction cosines .
The vector projection of
v onto
u is the vector
The magnitude of this vector is known as the
scalar projection of
v onto
u , given by
Work is done when a force is applied to an object, causing displacement. When the force is represented by the vector
F and the displacement is represented by the vector
s , then the work done
W is given by the formula
Key equations
Dot product of u and v
Cosine of the angle formed by u and v
Vector projection of v onto u
Scalar projection of v onto u
Work done by a force F to move an object through displacement vector
For the following exercises, the vectors
u and
v are given. Calculate the dot product