Physics, asked by bebeyhamm03, 1 year ago

conservative force and dissipative force

Answers

Answered by Honey6768
2
A conservative force is a force with the property that the total work done in moving a particle between two points is independent of the taken path.Equivalently, if a particle travels in a closed loop, the net work done (the sum of the force acting along the path multiplied by the displacement) by a conservative force is zero.
Dissipative forces are forces of such nature that energy is lost from a system when motion takes place. Of course energy is in general conserved but it is lost from the degrees of freedom of interest into heat (the random motion of internal degrees of freedom) or radiation (the motion of new particles created by the motion -- light usually).

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bebeyhamm03: Thank you so much. it helps me a lot. God bless
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Answered by Anonymous
0

Answer:

Explanation:Acceleration = (Final velocity - Initial velocity )/ Time

Acceleration = (Final velocity - Initial velocity )/ Time

Acceleration = (0 - 50) /  5

Acceleration = -50 / 5 Acceleration = (Final velocity - Initial velocity )/ Time

Acceleration = (0 - 50) /  5

Acceleration = -50 / 5

Acceleration = -10m/s^2

Hope this answer is correct..........

pl mark as brainliest if it helps you...........

Acceleration = -10m/s^2

Hope this answer is correct..........

pl mark as brainliest if it helps you...........

Acceleration = (0 - 50) /  5

Acceleration = -50 / 5

Acceleration = -10m/s^2

Hope this answer is correct..........

pl mark as brainliest if it helps you...........

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