Physics, asked by Aswad6037, 1 month ago

Moment of a force about a moment centre is the measure of its

Answers

Answered by ak4410492
0

The Moment of a force is a measure of its tendency to cause a body to rotate about a specific point or axis. This is different from the tendency for a body to move, or translate, in the direction of the force.

Answered by monishashkl
0

Answer:

The moment of a force about the respective moment center is the measure of its rotation along any axis.

Explanation:

The moment of the force of an object measures the respective tendency of the rotation of the given object along with any axis, whether it be the respective centroid axis of the object or any of the particular outside axis. The couple moment is found to be produced by the two respective forces, not by a single force.

The total work done is taken as the dot product of the force and distance, not the cross product.

Moments usually act about a given point in a clockwise direction or anticlockwise direction. The point chosen could be any point on the respective chosen object, but the fulcrum is usually chosen.

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