Using watts to help determine velocity?

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To determine the velocity of an object using watts, one must consider the mass, position, external forces, and the power being applied. While watts (joules per second) can indicate how much energy is being exerted, knowing the initial conditions, such as the object's state of rest and its historical forces, is crucial for accurate calculations. The relationship between power, force, and velocity is defined by the equation P=F*v, where power equals force times velocity. In a simulation without gravitational influence, understanding the forces and their durations is essential to calculate the object's kinetic energy and velocity. Thus, to find force from watts, one needs to know the duration of power application, which translates joules into energy changes affecting the object's motion.
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Here's what I know about an abstract object:
*mass
*position
*all external forces acting upon it (gravity ;)
*that it is exerting force upon itself
*direction of said force
*number of joules per second being used in said force (watts)

Can I use these to determine the velocity of the object? If not, what other information do I need? It's important that the joules per second (watts) be a part of the equation.
 
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as long as you can find a resultant force acting in one direction, you can calculate the velocity from the force and the power using P=F*v Power=Force*Velocity
 


Well, then, maybe this is a better question. Can you determine force from watts (joules per second) expended producing said force?
 
bluej774 said:
Here's what I know about an abstract object:
*mass
*position
*all external forces acting upon it (gravity ;)
*that it is exerting force upon itself
*direction of said force
*number of joules per second being used in said force (watts)

Can I use these to determine the velocity of the object? If not, what other information do I need? It's important that the joules per second (watts) be a part of the equation.

I think since velocity is the rate of change of position with respect to time, that without knowing some rate of change in position, as an initial condition, and the history of forces and energies affecting the object since, then you can't just tell from knowing all the forces acting on it at an arbitrary moment, because those forces result in accelerations, and those accelerations are only the rate of change of velocity at some point and don't necessarily speak to what it may be changing from or to.

I think you need to know it was at rest somewhere, or its velocity somewhere, and its history since to be able to determine what it's total kinetic energy (and hence velocity) is at the point of interest.
 


bluej774 said:
Well, then, maybe this is a better question. Can you determine force from watts (joules per second) expended producing said force?

J/s if you know the duration gives you joules and joules gives you energy added to the object and hence you know how much its kinetic energy may have changed.

But in reference to the prior post you only know how much it may have changed, and without knowing what it's kinetic energy is initially, then ...
 
I'm doing a simulation. That's why I need this info. I forgot to mention that the object begins at rest. However, the simulation is not in Earth's gravity. It is in a theoretical space without any major gravitational influence.
 
Well in that case yes.

You have position and it's at rest then all you need then is the forces and durations over its history to the moment of interest I'd say.
 
So, what is the equation to figure out force using joules per second?
 
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