Jose094
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Ok, so I had to find a way to find Kinetic Energy without finding the velocity, so I decided to move the equation, Ek=.5mv^2. Now then Ek.5m(x/t)^2 where x is distance and t is time. Work on the other hand is W=Fx, and F=ma, W=ma*x and a=(x/t^2), hence, W=m* (xx/t^2) or W=m*(x^2/t^2) or W=m*(x/t)^2. which is also the second part of the Ek equation, therefore, Kinetic Energy can be found by finding half of the work, could this work, is this actually possible or did I do something completely wrong?