245,555 views
10 votes
10 votes
You push a block at a constant speed across a horizontal surface that has a friction force of 2N. Your push is 2N and the displacement of the block is 10 m. How much total work is done on the block?

User Saran
by
3.5k points

1 Answer

24 votes
24 votes

ANSWER:

0 J

Explanation:

Given:

Applied force (F) = 2 N

Friction force (Ff) = -2 N

Distance (d) = 10 m

The work is equivalent to the product between the force and the distance, therefore, we calculate it in the following way:


\begin{gathered} \text{For the case of the applied force} \\ \\ W_(app)=F\cdot d \\ \\ \text{ We replacing} \\ \\ W_(app)=10\cdot2 \\ \\ W_(app)=20\text{ J} \\ \\ \text{ For the case of the friction force} \\ \\ W_(fric)=F_f\cdot d \\ \\ \text{We replac}\imaginaryI\text{ng} \\ \\ W_(fric)=-10\cdot2 \\ \\ W_(fric)=\text{ -20 J} \\ \\ \text{ Therefore, the total work would be:} \\ \\ W=W_(app)+W_(fric) \\ \\ W=20-20 \\ \\ W=0\text{ J} \end{gathered}

Which means that the total work is equal to 0 joules

User Aashutosh Kumar
by
2.4k points