Conservative force examples
Answers
Answered by
0
The gravitational force, spring force, magnetic force (according to some definitions, see below) and electric force (at least in a time-independent magnetic field, see Faraday's law of induction for details) are examples of conservative forces, while friction and air drag are classical examples of non-conservative ...
hope it help
mark as brainliest
Answered by
0
The work a conservative force does on an object in moving it from A to B is path independent - it depends only on the end points of the motion. Examples: the force of gravity and the spring force are conservative forces. For a non-conservative (or dissipative) force, the work done in going from A to B depends on the path taken. Examples: friction and air resistance.
Similar questions