Force & Energy: Can Force be Created Without Movement or Fields?

In summary: Nor is energy expended holding a nucleus together,in a stationary configuration, the binding energy remains fixed and steady; but you must spend or gain energy by reconfiguring the nuclear potential...moving the nuclear pieces...say fission or fusionSo i think there is no apply force in the universe without transfer or expend energy .Again, this is simply wrong. Let me give a brief (non-exhaustive) list:A book on a tableYour butt on your chairA screw in the wallA tool leaning against a wallA magnet on a refrigeratorA balloon charged with static electricity and
  • #1
big_bounce
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3
Hello all .
I have two questions
Energy can create force ? for apply a force we need energy ?
Think about one electron , if you want to apply a force on it , you must have a particle in moving or a filed . and fields and particles in moving have energy .
So is that correct for create force we require energy ?

If answer is negative can give me some examples that can create force without object in moving or fields .
 
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  • #2
Without knowing what level you can comprehend, I have to simply guess at what you are able to understand.

Force is related to the gradient of the potential energy.

http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/%E2%80%8Chbase/pegrav.html

Zz.
 
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  • #3
This is a consequence of teachers using the word "energy" so liberally.
It takes energy to do work.
 
  • #4
big_bounce said:
Think about one electron , if you want to apply a force on it , you must have a particle in moving or a filed . and fields and particles in moving have energy .
So is that correct for create force we require energy ?
No. While fields do have an associated energy density, it is not necessary for any of that energy to be expended in order to produce a force.
 
  • #5
DaleSpam said:
No. While fields do have an associated energy density, it is not necessary for any of that energy to be expended in order to produce a force.

But i think it is necessary .

Imagine two freedom electrons , one of them is at rest and another one is in moving .
When the moving electron comes closer and closer to rest electron , the electric filed of it apply force to another one and electron at rest starts to moving and get energy .
Also the rest electron apply reaction force to another electron and cause reduce it's speed .
Total energy is conserved but moving electron do work on another by electric field .

So i think there is no apply force in the universe without transfer or expend energy .
 
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  • #6
So is that correct for create force we require energy? If answer is negative can give me some examples that can create force without object in moving or fields .

not so simple a question as may be inferred from the different perspectives already posted.

Work involves a change in energy,an expendture of energy, and work involves a force over a distance...W = Fd...but if no distance is covered, no work is done and no energy expended...

examples of no energy expended:
It takes force to hold you on the earth, but no energy...F = GMm/22...
[You lose or gain potential energy by moving up or down in the gravitational potential and such movement does involved work.] Nor is energy expended holding a nucleus together,in a stationary configuration, the binding energy remains fixed and steady; but you must spend or gain energy by reconfiguring the nuclear potential...moving the nuclear pieces...say fission or fusion
 
  • #7
big_bounce said:
So i think there is no apply force in the universe without transfer or expend energy .
Constraint forces do no work e.g. the normal force.
 
  • #8
big bounce: I see you posted while I was composing.

bigbounce:
So i think there is no apply force in the universe without transfer or expend energy .

no, not in general...in the usual language of physics...I gave two contradictory examples above...
 
  • #9
the normal force.

in case you are not familiar with the details of the math notation [and I am not] an example of this is the magnetic force...F = qv x B...where the magnetic force is normal to the direction of particle motion so the work done on the particle by the magnetic force is zero...no change in magnetic field energy, nor the KE energy of the particle, but a force IS again exerted...
 
  • #10
big_bounce said:
But i think it is necessary .
No, it isn't necessary.

big_bounce said:
Imagine two freedom electrons , one of them is at rest and another one is in moving .
What about electrons which are not free and which are exerting forces on each other without moving?

big_bounce said:
So i think there is no apply force in the universe without transfer or expend energy .
Again, this is simply wrong. Let me give a brief (non-exhaustive) list:

A book on a table
Your butt on your chair
A screw in the wall
A tool leaning against a wall
A magnet on a refrigerator
A balloon charged with static electricity and stuck on a wall
The EM force between an electron and a nucleus while the electron remains in its orbital
The gravitational force for a circular orbit
Etc...
 
  • #11
Naty1 said:
not so simple a question as may be inferred from the different perspectives already posted.

Work involves a change in energy,an expendture of energy, and work involves a force over a distance...W = Fd...but if no distance is covered, no work is done and no energy expended...

examples of no energy expended:
It takes force to hold you on the earth, but no energy...F = GMm/22...
[You lose or gain potential energy by moving up or down in the gravitational potential and such movement does involved work.] Nor is energy expended holding a nucleus together,in a stationary configuration, the binding energy remains fixed and steady; but you must spend or gain energy by reconfiguring the nuclear potential...moving the nuclear pieces...say fission or fusion

DaleSpam said:
No, it isn't necessary.

What about electrons which are not free and which are exerting forces on each other without moving?

Again, this is simply wrong. Let me give a brief (non-exhaustive) list:

A book on a table
Your butt on your chair
A screw in the wall
A tool leaning against a wall
A magnet on a refrigerator
A balloon charged with static electricity and stuck on a wall
The EM force between an electron and a nucleus while the electron remains in its orbital
The gravitational force for a circular orbit
Etc...

Good examples thanks . i got about expend energy and force .

But my original perspective was if you want to move a object you must create force through distance and you must do work .
If you want increase speed of a object you must give it accelerator and for give accelerator you must produce a force . this force must apply through distance to able increase speed of object so you need energy for this .
So energy cause to motion and moving object not force .
Is it correct ?
 
  • #12
big_bounce said:
Good examples thanks . i got about expend energy and force .

But my original perspective was if you want to move a object you must create force through distance and you must do work .
Not necessarily. If an object is already in motion then no work is required to make it continue to move. And if you simply want to turn an object that doesn't require work either.

big_bounce said:
If you want increase speed of a object you must give it accelerator and for give accelerator you must produce a force . this force must apply through distance to able increase speed of object so you need energy for this .
Yes, it takes energy to increase speed.

big_bounce said:
So energy cause to motion and moving object not force .
Is it correct ?
No, not all motion involves acceleration, and not all acceleration involves a change in speed.

You shouldn't try to hammer concepts into places where they don't fit. Force is the gradient of energy (for a conservative system), so they are closely related. But they aren't the same thing. I wouldn't say that force causes motion since you can have velocity without acceleration, and energy has even less of a claim since you can have acceleration without a change in energy.
 
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  • #13
Naty1 said:
not so simple a question as may be inferred from the different perspectives already posted.

Work involves a change in energy,an expendture of energy, and work involves a force over a distance...W = Fd...but if no distance is covered, no work is done and no energy expended...

examples of no energy expended:
It takes force to hold you on the earth, but no energy...F = GMm/22...
[You lose or gain potential energy by moving up or down in the gravitational potential and such movement does involved work.] Nor is energy expended holding a nucleus together,in a stationary configuration, the binding energy remains fixed and steady; but you must spend or gain energy by reconfiguring the nuclear potential...moving the nuclear pieces...say fission or fusion

Hello
I think and i have a idea for expend energy and force please say what's the problem .

You said for holding a nucleus or quarks together there is no require expend energy .
I agree but for create these forces already expended energy in early universe and after that There is no require expend energy for holding them together .
Or you said "It takes force to hold you on the earth, but no energy"
I agree but when you stay in Earth force of your weight (mg ) exactly cancel out with normal force (N) and "net force" is zero Newtons .
 
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  • #14
DaleSpam said:
Not necessarily. If an object is already in motion then no work is required to make it continue to move.

Yes i know but for a object in motion you already expended energy and gave it energy .

DaleSpam said:
and not all acceleration involves a change in speed.

DaleSpam said:
since you can have acceleration without a change in energy.

How ? can give some examples for both of them .
Thanks a lot .
 
  • #15
big_bounce said:
How ? can give some examples for both of them .
Thanks a lot .
Centripetal acceleration. Velocity changes(the direction of the vector), but the speed and energy remain constant.
Another example for constant energy despite acceleration is anybody in free fall in a gravitational field - it merely exchanges potential energy for kinetic energy, but the total remains the same.
 
  • #16
big_bounce said:
Yes i know but for a object in motion you already expended energy and gave it energy .
No, not necessarily. The object in motion could have been created already moving at high speed. It will then continue to move at high speed without ever having work done on it. This happens all the time when muons are created in the upper atmosphere. They can travel at relativistic speeds for their entire brief lifetime without ever having work done on them.

big_bounce said:
How ? can give some examples for both of them .
Thanks a lot .
Uniform circular motion.

Look, your idea is simply wrong on multiple levels:
1) energy does not need to be expended to create a force
2) force is not required for velocity
3) energy is not required for acceleration

What is correct is that energy and force are related. Force is proportional to acceleration. Energy is a constant of motion and therefore a very useful quantity.

Now, if you have new questions about how energy and force work in general, we will be glad to answer. In particular, you may be interested in the Lagrangian formulation of classical mechanics where energy concepts are the focus and forces are secondary. But do not circle back to your refuted personal theories.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lagrangian_mechanics
 
  • #17
big bounce:
I was going to suggest this sooner and did not, but should have:
if you are really interested in understanding the relationships between work, force, energy,acceleration and so forth, you should really consider going back to basics...
the definitions of these in physical science.

Unless you know how each of these are defined and understand their application, and how they relate, you'll just go on and on and on among different examples...
an advantage of using a textbook, likesay, Halliday and Resnick, is that it is not only well edited
but has been revised,updated, and utilized for probably 50 years...
 
  • #18
This is all an unfortunate result of the popular media and high school teachers using the word energy where it does not belong, people get the idea that it's some galactic currency that gets things going.

Energy is just a convenient quantity that is time independent in closed systems.
 
  • #19
Bandersnatch said:
Another example for constant energy despite acceleration is anybody in free fall in a gravitational field - it merely exchanges potential energy for kinetic energy, but the total remains the same.

There is a problem .
For free falling in gravitational field we have a system not a object .
When you moving up a box from Earth you must expended energy and because of this total mass of system increase . but total mass of Earth and box remains constant .

This expended energy stored in gravitational field and after that the gravitational potential energy applies force to object and give it kinetic energy .
So please give a example that we have accelerator but object don't get energy .
Your example was a system involves two objects and gravitational filed between them .
 
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  • #20
DaleSpam said:
No, not necessarily. The object in motion could have been created already moving at high speed. It will then continue to move at high speed without ever having work done on it.


Yes . when we give energy to photon it never changing it's speed because C is limit speed in universe and when a black hole apply force to photon it never get accelerator because it's moving at C . but it's not true for object's that they move slower than light .
It never violate What I said .

DaleSpam said:
Look, your idea is simply wrong on multiple levels:
1) energy does not need to be expended to create a force
2) force is not required for velocity
3) energy is not required for acceleration

Let me give another example :
Consider a man wants to pull a box along a concrete floor . the box has a mass of 500 kg and the coefficient of friction between the box and the floor is 0.2 and g = 10 m/s2 .
Now if he applies 700 N on box , box produce 700 N in opposite direction
if he applies 800 N on box , box produce 800 N in opposite direction
if he applies 900 N on box , box produce 900 N in opposite direction
if he applies 1000 N on box , box produce 1000 N in opposite direction
in this case "net force" is zero and man doesn't do work .

According to what you said If we have a engine that applying 600 N on box in a day , the engine doesn't need energy for do this during this time .
Is it correct ?

But when he apply 1001 N on box , box starts to moving and gets accelerator and energy and now we expend energy .

So i say when we have non-zero "net force" that "act" on a object the force always do work and for produce a non-zero "net force" you must expend energy .
I know when theta be 90 degree work doesn't done but in reality there is example that "net force" be vertical and object moves in horizontal ?

Thanks
 
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  • #21
big_bounce said:
Yes . when we give energy to photon it never changing it's speed because C is limit speed in universe and when a black hole apply force to photon it never get accelerator because it's moving at C . but it's not true for object's that they move slower than light .
It never violate What I said .
The example I gave was for muons which are massive particles that travel slower than c and do, in fact, violate what you said.

And you returned to your refuted personal theories as I warned you not to do. Thread closed.
 

FAQ: Force & Energy: Can Force be Created Without Movement or Fields?

Can force be created without movement?

According to Newton's first law of motion, an object at rest will remain at rest unless acted upon by an external force. Therefore, it can be argued that force cannot be created without movement. However, there are certain cases where an object may experience a force without visibly moving, such as when an object is under pressure or experiencing a balanced force.

Can force be created without fields?

Fields, such as gravitational or electric fields, are responsible for exerting forces on objects. Therefore, it can be said that force cannot be created without fields. However, there are certain cases where forces can exist without the presence of a field, such as contact forces between two objects or forces exerted by a person.

How is force related to energy?

Force and energy are closely related concepts. Force is the measure of how an object interacts with other objects or fields, while energy is the measure of an object's ability to do work. In many cases, force is the cause of energy, as objects can gain or lose energy through the application of a force.

Can energy be created without force?

Energy cannot be created or destroyed, according to the law of conservation of energy. Therefore, it can be argued that energy cannot be created without force. However, there are certain cases where energy can appear to be created without the visible application of a force, such as in nuclear reactions or chemical reactions.

Is it possible to have force without energy?

Force is a measure of the interaction between objects or fields, while energy is a measure of an object's ability to do work. Therefore, it is not possible to have force without energy, as a force must be applied in order to do work and transfer energy from one object to another.

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