Originally posted by: Armitage
Only if it moves it.
Originally posted by: neonerd
Originally posted by: Armitage
Only if it moves it.
i thought that but wanted to make sure that the normal force could move it...i got confused whether it was a force just due to gravity, or just the reaction force of say an object on the ground
Originally posted by: neonerd
oh and:
can Kinetic Enery ever be negative? I say it can't because it only goes down to zero..when an object is completely still it has PE, but no KE; and that's only when an object is elevated. I know work can be negative though, and doesn't W = KE?
that's confusing me
Originally posted by: Wheatmaster
Originally posted by: neonerd
oh and:
can Kinetic Enery ever be negative? I say it can't because it only goes down to zero..when an object is completely still it has PE, but no KE; and that's only when an object is elevated. I know work can be negative though, and doesn't W = KE?
that's confusing me
you can't have negative PE or KE because for KE that just means no velocity and no for PE because it depends on what the reference is.
Originally posted by: neonerd
Originally posted by: Wheatmaster
Originally posted by: neonerd
oh and:
can Kinetic Enery ever be negative? I say it can't because it only goes down to zero..when an object is completely still it has PE, but no KE; and that's only when an object is elevated. I know work can be negative though, and doesn't W = KE?
that's confusing me
you can't have negative PE or KE because for KE that just means no velocity and no for PE because it depends on what the reference is.
PE you can have negative if i recall correctly....say the reference is sea level. Negative PE would be below sea level. It's how much work it actually takes to get something back to that reference point
Originally posted by: neonerd
can Kinetic Enery ever be negative?
Originally posted by: Wheatmaster
Originally posted by: neonerd
oh and:
can Kinetic Enery ever be negative? I say it can't because it only goes down to zero..when an object is completely still it has PE, but no KE; and that's only when an object is elevated. I know work can be negative though, and doesn't W = KE?
that's confusing me
you can't have negative PE or KE because for KE that just means no velocity and no for PE because it depends on what the reference is.
Originally posted by: neonerd
oh and:
can Kinetic Enery ever be negative? I say it can't because it only goes down to zero..when an object is completely still it has PE, but no KE; and that's only when an object is elevated. I know work can be negative though, and doesn't W = KE?
that's confusing me
Originally posted by: DrPizza
Hmmmm..... if an object were in an elevator that was going up...