Physics, asked by itsshreya871, 2 months ago

which of the following is equal with Newton meter ​

Answers

Answered by KRISHRAI94
0

Answer:

The newton-metre (also newton metre or newton meter; symbol N⋅m[1] or N m[1]) is a unit of torque (also called moment) in the SI system. One newton-metre is equal to the torque resulting from a force of one newton applied perpendicularly to the end of a moment arm that is one metre long. The nonstandard notation Nm occurs in some fields.

Newton-metre

Newton-metre.png

One newton-metre is the torque resulting from a force of one newton applied perpendicularly to the end of a moment arm that is one metre long.

General information

Unit system

SI derived unit

Unit of

torque

Symbol

N⋅m or N m

Conversions

1 N⋅m in ...

... is equal to ...

FPS system

0.73756215 lbf ft

inch⋅pound-force

8.8507 in lbf

inch⋅ounce-force

141.6 in oz

The unit is also used less commonly as a unit of work, or energy, in which case it is equivalent to the more common and standard SI unit of energy, the joule.[2] In this usage the metre term represents the distance travelled or displacement in the direction of the force, and not the perpendicular distance from a fulcrum as it does when used to express torque. This usage is generally discouraged,[3] since it can lead to confusion as to whether a given quantity expressed in newton-metres is a torque or a quantity of energy.[4] However, since torque represents energy transferred or expended per angle of revolution, one newton-metre of torque is equivalent to one joule per radian.[4]

Newton-metres and joules are dimensionally equivalent in the sense that they have the same expression in SI base units,

{\displaystyle 1\,{\text{N}}{\cdot }\mathrm {m} =1\,{\frac {{\text{kg}}{\cdot }{\text{m}}^{2}}{{\text{s}}^{2}}}\quad ,\quad 1\,\mathrm {J} =1\,{\frac {\mathrm {kg} {\cdot }\mathrm {m} ^{2}}{\mathrm {s} ^{2}}}}{\displaystyle 1\,{\text{N}}{\cdot }\mathrm {m} =1\,{\frac {{\text{kg}}{\cdot }{\text{m}}^{2}}{{\text{s}}^{2}}}\quad ,\quad 1\,\mathrm {J} =1\,{\frac {\mathrm {kg} {\cdot }\mathrm {m} ^{2}}{\mathrm {s} ^{2}}}}

but are distinguished to avoid misunderstandings when a torque is mistaken for an energy or vice versa. Similar examples of dimensionally equivalent units include Pa versus J/m3, Bq versus Hz, and ohm versus ohm per square.

Answered by ramsha12326
0

Answer:

Which of the following is equal with Newton-meter?

Joule

Horse power

Watt

Pascal

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