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dragon84
Dec12-04, 03:20 PM
I have a hw question that has a box and it has the 25N force acting on it in the opposite direction of the displacement. Is this possible or is the force poining in the wrong direction. I email my teacher but he hasnt replied yet.
You can view a diagram i made
HERE (http://www.geocities.com/simpreza2/)

Palindrom
Dec12-04, 03:32 PM
I don't see the problem... The acceleration will simply be negative, that is, the body will slow down. What's bothering you?

dragon84
Dec12-04, 03:50 PM
I dont know whats bothering me, it just does. Im also not looking for accleration. Im looking for W.

the problem says-

A constant force of 25N is applied as shown to a block which undergoes a displacement 7.5m to the right along a frictionless surface while the force acts. What is the work done by the force?

do I just use W=(F cos \theta) s
..................W=(25 cos 30) 7.5=162.37J

If thats it(which I doubt b/c I dont know what im talking about when it come to physcs), its way too easy of a prob that my professor usually gives out for HW

Palindrom
Dec12-04, 03:57 PM
You do just that, only the angle is now 210 instead of 30, that's all. (x's direction is to the right, so the angle with that direction isn't 30 but 180+30=210).
So you'll get exactly the negative value you got, which would mean to body does work on the guy that applies the force... (For instance, it could accelerate something that would be attached to it).

dragon84
Dec12-04, 04:09 PM
Ok, thanks for helping me out with that. I guess it was hard for me to understand b/c I was looking into it too much b/c my professor never gives out easy hw problems.