I failed to use the quoting tool, so I'll quote by putting in italic.
No. The "direction of motion" thing comes in because if a body is constrained to move in one direction I can apply a force at an angle and have to work harder to achieve the same effect because I'm wasting energy. For example, this just says that if I have a cart on a track I could push it parallel to the track or I could push diagonally. The cart will move in the same direction in both cases, but will not accelerate as hard in the latter case because I'm wasting some of the force trying to grind the wheels against the tracks.
Ok! This part makes sense for me.
This is not a good example because you are working against friction here, so there are two forces at work - your pushing and the table's friction. You need to consider a frictionless case - a mass on ice, for example, which will continue to slide at constant speed when you stop pushing.
Yes, I did not consider friction but forgot to write it, sorry. I agree, we only care about the force we exert here.
Now you can think about your masses. If you apply a force of 1N, what will the accelerations be? After 1m, what will the velocities be and how long did it take? What will the kinetic energies at that velocity be?
Here are my calculation (and they seem correct, as I find the same result, 1J, in both cases):
Formulas reminder:
Newton = kg * meter * second^-2
final speed = initial speed + acceleration * time
distance covered = initial speed * time + 1/2 * acceleration * time^2
kinetic energy = 1/2 * mass * speed^2
Problems information:
initial speed = 0 m.s^-2
distance covered = 1 m
Case of the 1kg object:
° acceleration = 1 m.s^-2
° distance covered = initial speed * time + 1/2 * acceleration * time^2
° 1 = 0*time + 1/2 * 1 * time^2 <=> time^2 = 2 <=> time ≃ 1.41 s
° final speed ≃ 1.41 m.s^-2
° kinetic energy at the end of this meter ≃ 1/2 * 1 * 1.41^2 = 1 J
Case of the 10kg object:
° acceleration = 0.1 m.s^-2
° distance covered = initial speed * time + 1/2 * acceleration * time^2
° 1 = 1/2 * 0.1 * time^2 <=> time^2 = 20 <=> time ≃ 4.47 s
° final speed ≃ 0.447 m.s^-2
° kinetic energy ≃ 1/2 * 10 * 0.447^2 = 1 J
Also you said:
but you will find that the difference in kinetic energies is independent of everything except the distance, the force, and the mass.
Did you mean "and *not* the mass"? If yes I agree, else I don't understand what you meant.
So, for answering both
@Ibix and
@Delta2, here is my reformulated question:
If I put a weight on a pulley system that gradually use the potential energy of the weight by lowering it in order to push either my 1kg or 10kg objects, they will end up with the same kinetic energy, which is the same as the weight's, when the weight touches the ground (modulo loss and other forces), right?
But in this case, why do I have the feeling that applying a force on the 10kg object for 4.5s would be harder than applying the same force on the 1kg object for 1.4s? Like, if I had to do it with my arm I would rather use the smaller object. I fill like I will have to put the same intensity in both cases (as I apply the same force), but one during 1.4s and one during 4.5s. What do I miss?