Is Friction Involved in the Work Done on a Book by a Man Walking?

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In summary, the man is holding a book while walking and the work done on the book is done by the force exerted by the man to overcome the weight of the book. The only forces acting on the book are the gravitational force downwards and the force by the man upwards, resulting in no work being done on the book if the man is moving at a constant velocity. If the book is accelerating, the work done on it is still zero unless there is a force acting on it in the direction of motion. Friction between the book and the hand does not do any work as they do not move relative to each other.
  • #1
primarygun
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A man holding a book is walking, what's the work done on the book by him?
Is this should be accounted into the work done by friction but not by the man? Cheers
 
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  • #2
What is work? It is the force exerted times the displacement in the direction of this force. So what is/are the force(s) exerted and what is the displacement in the direction of this/these force(s)?
 
  • #3
How is the man holding the book ??
Hint:- He is overcoming the wt. of the book to hold on to it.

This should give you some idea about the direction of motion and the book's displacement.
 
  • #4
Yes I know the work done by his hand is 0.
But the book is moving, the force applied is the reaction force of his motion, so what's the work done?
 
  • #5
primarygun said:
Yes I know the work done by his hand is 0.
But the book is moving, the force applied is the reaction force of his motion, so what's the work done?

I think you can best find the work done considering the kinetic energy and noticing that friction (between the book and hand) does no work as they do not move relative to each other.
 
  • #6
But

da_willem said:
I think you can best find the work done considering the kinetic energy and noticing that friction (between the book and hand) does no work as they do not move relative to each other.

But isn't the book is moving relative to the ground?
There must have some force applied.
 
  • #7
primarygun said:
But isn't the book is moving relative to the ground?
There must have some force applied.
No. Since there are no horizontal forces involved at all, the book won't need to be pushed along in the direction it is going. (Assuming the man walks with constant velocity).

The only forces on the book are the gravitational force downwards and the force by the man upwards.
 
  • #8
Because the man is holding the book while he is walking, you can consider it part of the system. Thus no work is done individually on the book. And if the man is moving with a constant velocity then no work is done at all. The only forces acting on the book are the gravitational and the normal force of the hand on the book.
 
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  • #9
Tjl said:
if the man is moving with a constant velocity then no work is done at all. As Galileo said

:biggrin: :biggrin: :biggrin:
 
  • #10
Umm.. I do not recollect ever mentioning Galileo in that response. Actually I am sure I did not... because that does not even have relation to him.
 
  • #11
How about the force by man is vertically upward, and the man is running?
The friction is able to hold the book on the hand of the man,i.e. not falling+ staying at one position of the hand, what's the work done by the man?
 
  • #12
Tjl said:
Umm.. I do not recollect ever mentioning Galileo in that response. Actually I am sure I did not...


Well you took it away after I mentioned it... o:) so sure you do not remember it... (You were referring to the PF member Galileo though)
 
  • #13
No matter whether the book is accelerating or non-accelerate, the man is still giving work to it.
 
  • #14
primarygun said:
No matter whether the book is accelerating or non-accelerate, the man is still giving work to it.

Ofcourse it matters if the book is accelerating or not, do you remember F=ma? If the book moves with a uniform velocity the resultant force on it is zero (Newtons first law, aka Galileo's principle). So the work done on it is also zero.
 
  • #15
da_willem said:
Well you took it away after I mentioned it... o:) so sure you do not remember it... (You were referring to the PF member Galileo though)

I see that now :biggrin: tricky tricky
 

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