- air force



Force
 

 

force
EU to force Microsoft to license Windows info for pittance 
AFP via Yahoo! News - 1 hour, 51 minutes ago
The European Commission will force Microsoft to hand over what the US software giant claims is sensitive and valuable technical information about its Windows operating system for almost no compensation, the Financial Times reported Wednesday, citing a confidential document.

forum
Beijing forum to up pressure on copyright violators: US Chamber 
AFP via Yahoo! News - Mar 21 12:56 PM
Business leaders will press China, Russia and other bastions of copyright "theft" to clean up their act at a global forum in Beijing next week, a top US executive said Wednesday.

forums
Library hosts forums on new building 
The Idaho Statesman - Apr 02 11:16 PM
The Nampa Public Library will launch a series of six brown-bag forums to gather public comment for a new building. Noon to 1 p.m., today, April 10, 17 and 21 at the Nampa Public Library, 101 11th Ave. S., Nampa.

fractals
BSO Pulls Out All the Stops To Showcase Schoenberg 
Washington Post - Mar 31 2:46 AM
Take an informal poll of which composer audiences find the most challenging, and Arnold Schoenberg likely will be near the top. Now poll players and critics about whose music they find most alluring. Yep: Schoenberg again. So, how to present the great modernist's music without hurling listeners...

franz ferdinand mp3
Mink 
Spin - Mar 28 7:13 AM
Aussie-bred group channels their inner rock spirit with charm.

freedownloads
Download Movies and Music Now Available From Rochester Public Library Website 
SYS-CON Media - Jul 07 8:41 AM
Today Rochester Public Library became one ofthe first libraries in the nation and the first in Minnesota to offer freedownloads of copy protected movies, music videos and music. The Collectionincludes classic American films such as 'Farewell to Arms' starring GaryCooper, International films such as Russia's 'Battleship Potemkin,' actionfilms such as 'Assault on Precinct 13' and music videos such


freestyles
Joyce bags another crown 
The Ann Arbor News - Mar 11 3:50 AM
MINNEAPOLIS - Pioneer High School graduate Kara Lynn Joyce etched her name in swimming history Saturday night. The University of Georgia senior and 2004 U.S. Olympian became the first swimmer in NCAA history to earn four championships each in the 50- and 100-yard freestyles.


freestyler
Erickson (finally) takes over STHS swimming 
Tahoe Daily Tribune - Mar 09 12:23 AM
Jerry Erickson has been a coach with the Tahoe Swim Club since the early 1980s, a span of over 25 years. However, he's never been South Tahoe's swim coach until now.


freya
Funds increase cleared at Cal State 
San Bernardino Sun - 10 minutes ago
Cal State San Bernardino athletic director Nancy Simpson is excited, and not just about the national semifinal showing by the men's basketball team. The student body recently passed a referendum that will enable Simpson to address some needs in the athletic program.


fundraisers
Fundraisers planned for comedian's statue 
UPI - Mar 05 5:09 AM
Benefits, a celebrity golf tournament and auctions are planned fundraisers to erect a statute of the late British comedian Les Dawson in Lytham St Annes. ...

funny cars
Todd, Capps score emotional triumphs in Texas 
USA Today - 1 hour, 50 minutes ago
J.R. Todd and Ron Capps dedicated their victories Sunday in the O'Reilly NHRA Spring Nationals to close friend Eric Medlen, the Funny Car driver killed March 23 after a testing accident. Also Sunday, Jason Line topped the Pro Stock field, and Angelle Sampey won the Pro Stock Motorcycle competition.

funny
Flex your funny bone 
CNN.com - Mar 28 5:40 AM
(CareerBuilder.com) -- Looking for something to smile about at work? How about this: Flexing your funny bone can significantly enhance your professional prospects. Ninety-one percent of executives surveyed by Robert Half International consider a sense of humor important to career advancement.

furnace filters
Stoking a young man's mechanical interest 
Seattle Times - Mar 31 12:33 AM
Q: My preteen son, who fancies himself a home-maintenance guru, has taken the furnace doors off several times while changing the filter...

gavel
Crook is newest judge in Burlington County 
Courier-Post - Mar 19 12:20 AM
A grandmother in her twilight years handed down to her grandson the gavel that his late grandfather used when presiding at college fraternity meetings in the Roaring Twenties.

galls
ASK MICK LASALLE, CHRONICLE MOVIE CRITIC 
San Francisco Chronicle - Apr 01 12:18 AM
Hi Mick: Why wasn't "The Painted Veil," one of the most beautifully filmed, well-acted movies of the year, up for an Academy Award in any category? It doesn't make sense to me. Barbara Begley, San Francisco Hi Barbara: I liked it, too, and I...

gamestop.com
Update -- GameStop's Income Soars 
Forbes - Mar 27 3:38 PM
Traders aggressively buy shares as the retailer blasts by Wall Street predictions.

ganesha
Visweswaran Dances Through Northwestern 
Daily Northwestern - Apr 02 12:31 AM
The lights in the ballroom studio slowly dimmed and the audience fell silent as a figure emerged from the darkness, her golden jewelry and bright clothing illuminated beneath a single spotlight. Chitra Visweswaran went on to perform several classical South Indian "Bharata Natyam" dances, captivating an audience of about 40 people Friday night at the Marjorie Ward Marshall Dance Center.

gangs
Hellertown's new gangs 
The Express-Times - 1 hour, 24 minutes ago
HELLERTOWN | Three Allentown men and a Coplay woman charged this week with planning a borough burglary are members of the Latin Kings street gang, Hellertown police Chief Robert Balum said Thursday.

gangsta
Mezuzah Misgivings 
Hartford Advocate - 26 minutes ago
When you hear the phrase Jewish transportation analyst who visits his mother on weekends, the words potentially threatening gangsta-type probably wont leap to mind. Maybe thats because youre not a cop in West Hartford.

gangster
No criminal charges for gangster's brother 
The Philadelphia Inquirer - Apr 05 12:36 AM
William M. Bulger once headed the state Senate and university.His brother, Whitey, is on the FBI's Most Wanted list.

gaara

girth
TV Review: The Tudors  
Blogcritics.org - Apr 01 6:40 PM
You might think a ten-part series about a young Henry VIII would be a stodgy affair, given our popular perception of the English King as a man of considerable girth with a bad marital track record. The Showtime series The Tudors , premiering tonight 10 PM EST, handily shatters any such notions. As portrayed by Johnathan Rhys Meyers, Henry is a vibrant, athletic sovereign as consumed with his ...


geena
Star students pay tribute to beloved acting teacher 
Houston Chronicle - Mar 09 10:52 PM
The film, which screens Monday at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, boasts a large contingent of London students eager to show their love.

geneaology
Probate Genealogy Boosted by Online Archives 
[Press Release] PR Web - Mar 28 12:13 AM
New plans to add more archived data to internet resources could further improve the outstanding service provided by probate genealogy. (PRWeb Mar 28, 2007)

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Force
For other senses of this word, see force (disambiguation).

In physics, a force is an external cause responsible for any change of a physical system. For instance, a person holding a dog by a rope is experiencing the force applied by the rope on their hand, and the cause for its pulling forward is the force exercised by the rope. The kinetic expression of this change is, according to Newton's second law, acceleration, non kinetic expressions such as deformation can also occur. The SI unit for force is the newton.

Contents

  • 1 Elementary concepts
  • 2 Quantitative definition
  • 3 Types of force
  • 4 Properties of force
  • 5 Forces in theory
  • 6 Units of measurement
    • 6.1 Non-SI units of force and mass
    • 6.2 Conversions
  • 7 Forces in everyday life
  • 8 Forces in the laboratory
    • 8.1 Founding experiments
    • 8.2 Instruments to measure forces
  • 9 History
  • 10 See also
  • 11 References
  • 12 External links

Elementary concepts

Force in its most primitive definition can be thought of as that which when acting alone causes an object to accelerate. In a practical sense forces can be divided into two groups: contact forces and field forces. Contact forces require the physical contact of one object with other such as a hammer striking a nail or the force exerted by a gas under pressure - gas produced by exploding gunpowder forces a heavy ball out of a cannon. Field forces on the other hand need no physical medium of contact. Gravity and magnetism are examples of such forces. It should be noted however, that fundamentally all forces are in fact field forces. The force of hammer striking the nail in the previous example turns out to be a clash of the electric forces in both hammer and nail. Nevertheless it is appropriate in some cases to maintain these two classifications for ease of understanding.

Quantitative definition

In physics models, the point-like system is used, where objects are represented as one-dimensional points at their centre of mass. The only change the system can experience is a change of its momentum (its speed). Since the rise of the atomic theory, any physical system has been considered in classical physics as composed of point-like systems called atoms or molecules. Therefore, all forces can be defined by their effect; that is, by the change of movement they induce on point-like systems. This change of movement can be quantified by the acceleration (the derivative of velocity). The discovery by Isaac Newton that a given force will induce an acceleration in inverse proportion to a quantity called the mass of inertia or inertial mass which is independent of the speed of the system is Newton's second law. This law allows us to predict the effect of a force on any point-like system whose mass is known. It is usually written as:

F = dp/dt = d(m·v)/dt = m·a (in the case where m does not depend on t)

where

F is the force (a vector quantity),
p is the momentum,
t is the time,
v is the velocity,
m is the mass, and
a=d²x/dt² is the acceleration, the second derivative with respect to t of the position vector x.

If the mass m is measured in kilograms and the acceleration a is measured in metres per second squared, then the unit of force is kilogram × metre/second squared. This unit is called the newton: 1 N = 1 kg x 1 m/s².

This equation is a system of three second-order differential equations with respect to the three-dimensional position vector which is an unknown function of time. This equation can be solved if F is a known function of x and some of its derivatives and if the mass m is known. Morevover the boundary conditions are required; for example, the values of the position vector and x and the velocity v at the starting time, say t=0.

Of course, this formula is only useful if one knows the numerical values of F and m. The definition above is an implicit definition, arrived at as follows. One defines a reference system (one litre of water) and a reference force (the gravitational force applied by the Earth on it at the altitude of Paris). One takes Newton's second law for granted (one postulates that it is true) and measures the acceleration induced by the reference force on the reference system. This gives us a mass unit (1 kg) and a force unit (the older unit of 1 kilogram-force = 9.81 N). Once this is done, one can measure any force by the acceleration it induces on the reference system and measure the inertial mass of any system by measuring the acceleration induced on this system by the reference force.

Force is often considered a fundamental quantity in physics, but there are more fundamental quantities, such as momentum (p = mass m x velocity v). Energy, measured in joules, is still less fundamental than force and momentum, because it is defined as work, and work is defined in terms of force. The two most fundamental theories of nature - quantum electrodynamics and general relativity - do not contain the concept of force at all.

Although not the most fundamental quantity in physics, force is an important basic mathematical concept from which other concepts, such work and pressure (measured in pascals), are derived. Force is sometimes confused with stress.

Types of force

There are four known fundamental forces in nature.

  • Nuclear forces acting between subatomic particles
  • Electromagnetic forces between electric charges
  • Weak forces arising from radioactive decay
  • Gravitational forces between masses

Quantum field theory accurately models the first three fundamental forces, but does not model quantum gravity. Quantum gravity on a large scale can, however, be described by general relativity.

The four fundamental forces describe every observable phenomenon including the many other forces observed such as: Coulomb's force (the force between electrical charges), gravitational force (force between masses), magnetic force, frictional forces, centripetal, centrifugal, impact force, and spring force, to name a few.

Forces can also be classified into conservative forces and nonconservative forces. Conservative forces are equivalent to the gradient of a potential, and include gravity, electromagnetic force, and spring force. Nonconservative forces include friction and drag.

Properties of force

Because momentum is a vector, then force, being its time derivative, is also a vector - it has magnitude and direction.

Forces can be added together using the parallelogram of force. When two forces act on an object, the resulting force, the resultant, is the vector sum of the original forces. This is called the principle of superposition. The magnitude of the resultant varies from zero to the sum of the magnitudes of the two forces, depending on the angle between their lines of action. If the two forces are equal, but opposite, the resultant is zero. This condition is called static equilibrium, with the result that the object remains at rest or moves with a constant velocity.

As well as being added, forces can be can also be broken down (or 'resolved'). For example, a horizontal force pointing northeast can be split into two forces, one pointing north, and one pointing east. Summing these component forces using vector addition yields the original force. Force vectors can also be three-dimensional, with the third (vertical) component at right-angles to the two horizontal components.

Forces in theory

The total (Newtonian) force, in newtons, on an object at any given time is defined as the rate of change of the object's velocity multiplied by the object's mass:

<math>\mathbf{F} = \lim_{T \rightarrow 0 } \frac{m\mathbf{v} - m\mathbf{v}_0}{T}</math>

where

m is the inertial mass of the particle (measured in kilograms)
vo is its initial velocity (measured in metres per second)
v is its final velocity (measured in metres per second)
T is the time from the initial state to the final state (measured in seconds);
Lim T→0 is the limit as T tends towards zero.

Force was so defined to explain the effects of superimposing situations: if in one situation, a force is experienced by a particle, and if in another situation another force is experienced by that particle, then in a third situation, which (according to standard physical practice) is taken to be a combination of the two individual situations, the force experienced by the particle will be the vector sum of the individual forces experienced in the first two situations. This superposition of forces, and the definition of inertial frames and inertial mass, are the empirical content of Newton's laws of motion.

There are other ways to look at the above definition of force. First, the mass of a body multiplied by its velocity is called its momentum, p, so the above definition is equivalent to:

<math>\textbf{F}={\Delta \textbf{p} \over \Delta t}</math>

If F is not constant over Δt, then this is the definition of average force over the time interval. To apply it at an instant we apply an idea from calculus. If we graph p as a function of time, the average force will be the slope of the line connecting the momentum at two times. Taking the limit as the two times get closer together gives the slope at an instant, which is called the derivative:

<math>\textbf{F}={d\textbf{p}\over dt}</math>

Many forces are associated with a potential energy field. For instance, the gravitational force acting upon a body can be seen as the action of the gravitational field that is present at the body's location. The potential field is defined as that field whose gradient is equal and opposite to the force produced at every point:

<math>\textbf{F}=-\nabla U</math>

The derivative of force with respect to time is called yank. Higher order derivatives are sometimes used, but they lack names because of their rarity.

In most explanations of mechanics, force is usually defined only implicitly, in terms of the equations that work with it. Some physicists, philosophers and mathematicians, such as Ernst Mach, Clifford Truesdell and Walter Noll, have found this problematic and sought a more explicit definition of force.

According to the Special theory of relativity the mass of an object increases as it's velocity and therefore it's energy increases. The law of force must then be modified to the following:

<math>\textbf{F}={{ma}\over\sqrt{1 - v^2/c^2}}</math>

where

v is the mass's velocity
c is the speed of light.

Note that the equation is undefined if the mass's speed is equal to c because one then has to divide by zero. This is one reason most physicists believe an object with nonzero rest mass can not be accelerated to the speed of light, as this would require an infinite force.

Units of measurement

The SI unit used to measure force is the newton (symbol N), which is equivalent to kg·m·s−2.

Non-SI units of force and mass

The F=m·a relationship can be used with any consistent units (SI or CGS). If these units are not consistent, a more general form, F=k·m·a, can be used, where the constant k is a conversion factor dependent upon the units being used.

For example, in imperial engineering units, F is measured in "pounds force" or "lbf", m in "pounds mass" or "lb", and a in feet per second squared. In this particular system, one needs to use the more general form above, usually written F=m·a/gc with the constant normally used for this purpose gc = 32.174 lb·ft/(lbf·s2) equal to the reciprocal of the k above.

As with the kilogram, the pound is colloquially used as both a unit of mass and a unit of force. 1 lbf is the force required to accelerate 1 lb at 32.174 ft per second squared, since 32.174 ft per second squared is the standard acceleration due to terrestrial gravity.

Another imperial unit of mass is the slug, defined as 32.174 lb. It is the mass that accelerates by one foot per second squared when a force of one lbf is exerted on it.

When the standard gee (an acceleration of 9.80665 m/s²) is used to define pounds force, the mass in pounds is numerically equal to the weight in pounds force. However, even at sea level on Earth, the actual acceleration of free fall is quite variable, over 0.53% more at the poles than at the equator. Thus, a mass of 1.0000 lb at sea level at the equator exerts a force due to gravity of 0.9973 lbf, whereas a mass of 1.000 lb at sea level at the poles exerts a force due to gravity of 1.0026 lbf. The normal average sea level acceleration on Earth (World Gravity Formula 1980) is 9.79764 m/s², so on average at sea level on Earth, 1.0000 lb will exerts a force of 0.9991 lbf.

The equivalence 1 lb = 0.453 592 37 kg is always true, by definition, anywhere in the universe. If you use the standard gee which is official for defining kilograms force to define pounds force as well, then the same relationship will hold between pounds-force and kilograms-force (an old non-SI unit is still used). If a different value is used to define pounds force, then the relationship to kilograms force will be slightly different—but in any case, that relationship is also a constant anywhere in the universe. What is not constant throughout the universe is the amount of force in terms of pounds-force (or any other force units) which 1 lb will exert due to gravity.

By analogy with the slug, there is a rarely used unit of mass called the "metric slug". This is the mass that accelerates at one metre per second squared when pushed by a force of one kgf. An item with a mass of 10 kg has a mass of 1.01972661 metric slugs (= 10 kg divided by 9.80665 kg per metric slug). This unit is also known by various other names such as the hyl, TME (from a German acronym), and mug (from metric slug).

Another unit of force called the poundal (pdl) is defined as the force that accelerates 1 lbm at 1 foot per second squared. Given that 1 lbf = 32.174 lb times one foot per second squared, we have 1 lbf = 32.174 pdl. The kilogram-force is a unit of force that was used in various fields of science and technology. In 1901, the CGPM improved the definition of the kilogram-force, adopting a standard acceleration of gravity for the purpose, and making the kilogram-force equal to the force exerted by a mass of 1 kg when accelerated by 9.80665 m/s². The kilogram-force is not a part of the modern SI system, but is still used in applications such as:

  • Thrust of jet and rocket engines
  • Spoke tension of bicycles
  • Draw weight of bows
  • Torque wrenches in units such as "meter kilograms" or "kilogram centimetres" (the kilograms are rarely identified as units of force)
  • Engine torque output (kgf·m expressed in various word orders, spellings, and symbols)
  • Pressure gauges in "kg/cm²" or "kgf/cm²"

In colloquial, non-scientific usage, the "kilograms" used for "weight" are almost always the proper SI units for this purpose. They are units of mass, not units of force.

The symbol "kgm" for kilograms is also sometimes encountered. This might occasionally be an attempt to disintinguish kilograms as units of mass from the "kgf" symbol for the units of force. It might also be used as a symbol for those obsolete torque units (kilogram-force metres) mentioned above, used without properly separating the units for kilogram and metre with either a space or a centered dot.

Conversions

Below are several coversion factors between various mesurements of force:

  • 1 kgf (kilopond kp) = 9.80665 newtons
  • 1 metric slug = 9.80665 kg
  • 1 lbf = 32.174 poundals
  • 1 slug = 32.174 lb
  • 1 kgf = 2.2046 lbf

Forces in everyday life

Forces are part of everyday life, with examples such as:

  • gravity: objects fall, even after being thrown upwards, or slide and roll down
  • friction: floors and objects that are not extremely slippery
  • spring force, objects resist tensile stress, compressive stress and/or shear stress, objects bounce back.
  • electromagnetic force: attraction of magnets
  • movement created by force: the movement of objects when force is applied.

Forces in the laboratory

Founding experiments

  • Galileo Galilei used rolling balls to disprove the Aristotelian theory of motion (1602 - 1607)
  • Henry Cavendish's torsion bar experiment measured the force of gravity between two masses (1798)

Instruments to measure forces

  • spring balance
  • pivot balance
  • forcemeter

History

Force was first described by Archimedes.

See also

Wikibooks FHSST Physics Forces has more about this subject:
What is a force
  • Fictitious force
  • Fundamental force
  • SI
  • Electromagnetic jet
  • Torque
  • Force (Star Wars)

References

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        External links

        • Calculation: force F - English and American units to metric units
        • Online Unit Converter - Conversion of many different units
        • Interactive demonstration of Force-Work-Power Relationshipca:Força
        Search Term: "Force"

EU to force Microsoft to license Windows info for pittance 

AFP via Yahoo! News - 1 hour, 51 minutes ago
The European Commission will force Microsoft to hand over what the US software giant claims is sensitive and valuable technical information about its Windows operating system for almost no compensation, the Financial Times reported Wednesday, citing a confidential document.
Bzdelik leaves Air Force to coach Colorado 
USA Today - Apr 04 12:51 PM
Coach Jeff Bzdelik became the new coach at Colorado on Wednesday, leaving the head job at Air Force and signing a five-year deal with the Buffaloes. Bzdelik, who had two successful seasons at Air Force, agreed to a deal worth $750,000 annually plus incentives, Colorado athletic director Mike Bohn said.

Colorado hires Air Force's Bzdelik 
The Arizona Republic - Apr 05 2:31 AM
Jeff Bzdelik became the men's basketball coach at Colorado Wednesday, leaving the top job at Air Force and signing a five-year deal with the Buffaloes.

Colorado lures Bzdelik away from Air Force 
Sports Illustrated - Apr 04 10:02 AM
Coach Jeff Bzdelik became the new coach at Colorado on Wednesday, leaving the head job at Air Force and signing a five-year deal with the Buffaloes.

Irresistible Force meet immovable object 
Fox Sports - Apr 05 1:00 AM
Super 14 Preview: Defending champion the Crusaders and precocious challengers the Western Force meet Saturday in a Super 14 showdown which Crusaders coach Robbie Deans predicts will be one of the best matches of the tournament.

Bzdelik eager to prove Buffs can be a force 
Denver Post - Apr 05 12:15 AM
Boulder - Jeff Bzdelik agonized over the decision. His Air Force players and everything they represent tugged at his heart.

Deadly force bill moving in Legislature 
WMCTV Memphis - 52 minutes ago
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - Legislation is moving in the Tennessee House to allow more use of deadly force for self-defense. The bill would expand the circumstances under which a person using deadly force

Air Force fighter loses canopy, lands safely in Nevada 
KESQ - 28 minutes ago
LAS VEGAS A military F-15-C Eagle fighter jet lost its cockpit canopy during a test mission in southern Nevada, but was able to return safely to Nellis Air Force Base.

Air Force fighter loses canopy, lands safely in Nevada 
Las Vegas Sun - 53 minutes ago
LAS VEGAS (AP) - A military F-15C Eagle fighter jet lost its cockpit canopy during a test mission in southern Nevada, but returned safely to Nellis Air Force Base, officials said.

Deadly force bill moving in Legislature 
Eyewitness News Memphis - 1 hour, 40 minutes ago
Legislation is moving in the Tennessee House to allow more use of deadly force for self-defense.

Last Update: 2007-04-05 07:41:07