Cross/Dot Products in Physics: Work, Torque & Impulse

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Work is defined as the dot product of force and displacement, represented as Fdcos(theta), where theta is the angle between the force and the direction of motion. Torque, on the other hand, is calculated using the cross product as rFsin(theta), where r is the radius and F is the applied force. The discussion clarifies that the angle in the work equation pertains to the direction of motion rather than the force's angle with the object. Additionally, impulse is related to work through integration, highlighting the connection between these concepts in physics. Understanding these relationships is essential for grasping fundamental mechanics principles.
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Hello, I was thinking about the definition of Work to equal Fdcos(theta) , where F is force and d is the distance traveled; and that torque is rFsin(theta) whereas r is radius, and F is the force applied, and theta is the angle that the force vector makes with the object. I understand the geometric reasoning to the equation for torque above, but not as for work. Could you help me with some insight on the theory behind this? (Also I'm interested as to how Impulse is the integral of Work done). And what other things in mechanics or any branch of physics involve these cross products or dot products?

Thanks in advance, and my apologies for the very basic questions; I'm relatively new to physics, but I'm excited to familiarize myself with what goes on behind the problems I solve and the equations I use on my homework problems. Cheers, Daniel. =)
 
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\theta is the angle between the direction of the applied force and the path of motion of the object (not the angle that the force makes with the object). Work is defined as the amount of force applied over the path of motion. So we take the dot product of force and the path of motion (and integrate over the path to find work) to find the component of the force that was actually applied along the path. In scalar form, this is equal to F*\cos(\theta).
 
So I know that electrons are fundamental, there's no 'material' that makes them up, it's like talking about a colour itself rather than a car or a flower. Now protons and neutrons and quarks and whatever other stuff is there fundamentally, I want someone to kind of teach me these, I have a lot of questions that books might not give the answer in the way I understand. Thanks
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