Derivative of Force in terms of distance?

AI Thread Summary
The area under the curve of a force versus distance graph represents work or energy, calculated as the integral of force over distance. The slope of the curve indicates how force changes with distance, represented mathematically as the derivative of force with respect to distance. For linear functions, this slope gives force per unit distance, while for non-linear functions, it reflects the gradient of force as a function of distance. An example provided is Hooke's Law, where the slope corresponds to the spring constant. Understanding these concepts is essential for deeper insights into force and energy relationships.
Ocata
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Hi,

Suppose I have a function on a graph with a vertical axis is Force and the horizontal axis is distance. Then the area under the curve is given by F*d = Work = Energy, correct? If so, then what would the slope of the curve represent? F/d = ?

Thank you.
 
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It will give you the force per unit distance if your function is linear in x(like in a spring).
Otherwise it will give you the gradient of the force as a function of x if your function is non-linear(like coulomb's law).
To know more about gradient https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gradient.
 
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1. The area under the curve in general is given by ## \int_{x_{i}}^{x_{f}}F(x)d\,x =W ## , if ##F## is constant then ## W=F\Delta x## (I suppose always ## \cos{\theta}=1##)
2. The slope of the curve is ## \frac{d}{dx}F(x) ## and represent how the force grow or decrease respect the distance, as example if ## F_{Hooke}(x)=-kx ## then ## \frac{d}{dx}F_{Hooke}=-k## is the elastic coefficient ...
 
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Essentially the slope gives you the spring constant at that point.
 
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Thank you all. I will revisit this topic soon. I need to understand a few prerequisite concepts first, for which I need to create a new thread.
 
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