Calculating Work Done on an Object with Force in One Direction

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The discussion focuses on calculating the work done on an object by a force vector as it moves along the x-axis. The force is defined as F = axÎ + byj, with specific values for a and b, and the displacement is solely in the i direction. Participants clarify that the j component of the force is zero during this motion, and suggest using integration to compute the work done, rather than relying on a simple dot product. The conversation highlights the importance of recognizing that the force is variable, indicating a spring-like behavior, which requires integration for accurate calculation. Ultimately, the integration approach is recommended to derive the work done correctly.
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[SOLVED] Friction help please

Homework Statement


A force F = axÎ+byj , where a = 1.5 N/m and b = 1.7 N/m, acts on an object as the object moves in the Î direction along the x- axis from the origin to c = 4.1 m. Find the work done on the object by the force. Answer in units of J.

Then j is supposed to have a hat on it too and the Force (F) is a vector with the arrow over it.


Homework Equations


The Attempt at a Solution



I am pretty sure that I am supposed to take the dot product of the force and the displacement but how do you take the dot product of the force and the displacement when the displacement is only in the i direction? There is no j portion of it.

I would appreciate a little help getting started with this. Thank you
 
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Sure there is! How large is the j component of a vector that points in the i direction? To put it another way: you know your displacement vector is D = 4.1i, right? So if you set D = 4.1i = xi + yj ... what must be the values of x and y?
 
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belliott4488 said:
Sure there is! How large is the j component of a vector that points in the i direction? To put it another way: you know your displacement vector is D = 4.1i, right? So if you set D = 4.1i = xi + yj ... what must be the values of x and y?

oops...i mean 4.1 would be x and 0 would be y...
 
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is that right?
 
I try to multiply these two together: 1.5xi+1.7yj and 4.1xi+0.0yj and I get 6.15 but this is not right. What am i doing wrong?
 
it shall save a lot of trouble if you try integration dear..

>>Work Done = integral of vector F .dx ; integrate x from 0 to 4.1.

this shall simplify the problem much...
 
physixguru said:
it shall save a lot of trouble if you try integration dear..

>>Work Done = integral of vector F .dx ; integrate x from 0 to 4.1.

this shall simplify the problem much...
I think I see what's going on. jj8890 is assuming that the force is constant, as I was at first. Since the force is given in units of N/m, then I see that the x and y appearing in the force definition are not subscripts, but are variables of displacement. We must have a spring here.

So, jj8890 - try what physixguru suggested - do your dot product, but do it for each point along the motion in the x-direction, i.e. integrate. (If you know how to use Hook's Law for springs, you could jump right to the answer, but doing the integral essentially derives the expression for the potential energy of a spring, which goes with Hook's Law.)
 
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