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"How much work is required to lift an object with a mass of 5.0 kilograms to a height of 3.5 meters?" What would be the formula for this?

asked
User Aulana
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7.8k points

2 Answers

2 votes

Answer:

B for plato.

Step-by-step explanation:

Hello there.This problem is algebraically simple, but we must try to understand the 'ifs'.The work required is proportional to the force applied and the distance between the initial point and the end. Note: the work does not take account of the path which is described by the object, only the initial and final point. This happens because the gravitational force is generated by a conservative vector field. Assuming the ascent speed is constant:The force applied equals to the weight of the object. Then:F = W = m . gF = 5 · 9,81F = 49,05 NSince work equals to Force times displacement in a line, we write:Letter B

answered
User Walterra
by
8.1k points
7 votes
The answer is 172 J (or 1.72 · 10² J)

A work (W) is a product of a force (F) and a distance (d): W = F · d
Since the force is a product of mass and acceleration: F = m · a
then work would be: W = m · a · h

It is known:
m = 5 kg
h = 3.5 m
a = 9.8 m/s² (gravitational acceleration, since is expected that on some height gravitation force will work).

Therefore,
W = 5 · 9.8 · 3.5 = 171.5 J ≈ 172 J ≈ 1.72 · 10² J
answered
User Nitin Rastogi
by
7.3k points

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