Unit conversion difficulties on simple problem

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xgoddess210
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Homework Statement



A 55 g particle is moving to the left at 27 m/s. How much work must be done on the particle to cause it to move to the right at 41 m/s? Answer in joules

Homework Equations





The Attempt at a Solution



27-(-41)=68 , 68*55= 3750

the units here are grams m/s. I need joules. I have no clue on how to make that happen. I can change the g to kg and even get it to Newtons (since I know a joule= Newton-meter) , but I can't take it any farther. Please help!
 
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xgoddess210 said:
27-(-41)=68 , 68*55= 3750

the units here are grams m/s. I need joules. I have no clue on how to make that happen. I can change the g to kg and even get it to Newtons (since I know a joule= Newton-meter) , but I can't take it any farther. Please help!

Just convert g to kg in your equation is all you need to do.
 
I tried that- It gives me an answer of 3.74, but that is wrong. This doesn't really make sense to me.
 
oh! The equation I have for work is W=Fx, but all that is given to me is two velocities and a mass. Force is m*a so w=m*a*x. I guess I'm still at a loss here.
 
Oops. That's right. I just thought you were converting units wrong like your title was asking.

Overlooked that it was work and that's not work you have.

What about figuring the change in kinetic energy then?