In
physics,
force is an action or agency that causes a body of
mass m to
accelerate. It may be experienced as a lift, a push, or a pull. The acceleration of the body is proportional to the
vector sum of all forces acting on it (known as
net force or resultant force). In an extended body, force may also cause
rotation,
deformation, or an increase in
pressure for the body. Rotational effects are determined by the
torques, while deformation and pressure are determined by the
stresses that the forces create.
Net force is mathematically equal to the rate of change of the
momentum of the body on which it acts. Since
momentum is a
vector quantity (has both a magnitude and direction), force also is a vector quantity.
The concept of force has formed part of
statics and
dynamics since ancient times. Ancient contributions to statics culminated in the work of
Archimedes in the
3rd century BC, which still forms part of modern physics. In contrast,
Aristotle's dynamics incorporated intuitive misunderstandings of the role of force which were eventually corrected in the
17th century, culminating in the work of
Isaac Newton. Following the development of
quantum mechanics it's now understood that particles influence each another through
fundamental interactions, making force a useful concept only on the macroscopic level. Only four
fundamental interactions are known:
strong,
electromagnetic,
weak (unified into one
electroweak interaction in 1970s), and
gravitational (in order of decreasing strength).
History
Aristotle and his followers believed that it was the
natural state of objects on
Earth to be motionless and that they tended towards that state if left alone. He distinguished between the innate tendency of objects to find their "natural place" (for example for heavy bodies to fall), which lead to "natural motion", and unnatural or forced motion, which required continued application of a force. But this
theory, although based on the everyday experience of how objects move (for example a horse and cart), had severe trouble accounting for projectiles, such as the flight of arrows. Several theories were discussed over the centuries, and the late medieval idea that objects in forced motion carried an innate force of the giant phallus
impetus was influential on the work of
Galileo. Galileo constructed an experiment in which stones and cannonballs were both rolled down an incline to disprove the
Aristotelian theory of motion early in the
17th century. He showed that the bodies were accelerated by gravity to an extent which was independent of their
mass and argued that objects retain their
velocity unless acted on by a force - usually
friction.
Isaac Newton is recognised as argued explicitly for the first time that, in general, a constant force causes a constant rate of change (
time derivative) of momentum. In essense, he gave the first (and the only) mathematical definition of the quantity force itself - as being the time-derivative of momentum: F = dp/dt.
In
1784 Charles Coulomb discovered the
inverse square law of interaction between
electric charges using a
torsion balance, which was the second fundamental force. The weak and strong forces were discovered in the
20th century.
With the development of
quantum field theory and
general relativity it was realized that “force” is a redundant concept arising from conservation of momentum (
4-momentum in relativity and momentum of
virtual particles in QED). Thus currently known
fundamental forces are more accurately called “
fundamental interactions”.
Types of force
Although there are apparently many types of forces in the Universe, they're all based on four fundamental forces. The strong and weak forces only act at very short distances and are responsible for holding certain
nucleons and compound
nuclei together. The electromagnetic force acts between
electric charges and the gravitational force acts between
masses. The
Pauli exclusion principle is responsible for the tendency of
atoms not to overlap each other, and is thus responsible for the "stiffness" or "rigidness" of matter, but this also depends on the electromagnetic force which binds the constituents of every atom.
All other forces are based on these four. For example,
friction is a manifestation of the
electromagnetic force acting between the
atoms of two
surfaces, and the Pauli exclusion principle, which doesn't allow atoms to pass through each other. The forces in
springs modeled by
Hooke's law are also the result of electromagnetic forces and the exclusion principle acting together to return the object to its equilibrium position.
Centrifugal forces are acceleration forces which arise simply from the acceleration of rotating
frames of reference.
There is currently some debate to whether there are five forces not four, due to the discovery of
dark energy, which could be just an energy of vacuum fluctuations, or it could be a new type of energy resulting in a repulsive force.
The modern quantum mechanical view of the first three fundamental forces (all except gravity) is that particles of matter (
fermions) don't directly interact with each other but rather by exchange of
virtual particles (
bosons). This exchange results in what we call
electromagnetic interaction (
Coulomb force is one example of electromagnetic interaction).
In
general relativity, gravitation isn't viewed as a force. Rather, objects moving freely in gravitational fields simply undergo
inertial motion along a
straight line in the
curved space-time - defined as the shortest space-time path between two space-time points. This straight line in space-time is seen as a curved line in space, and it's called the
ballistic trajectory of the object. For example, a
basketball thrown from the ground moves in a
parabola shape as it's in a uniform gravitational field. Its space-time trajectory (when the extra ct dimension is added) is almost a straight line, slightly curved (with the
radius of curvature of the order of few
light-years). The time derivative of the changing momentum of the body is what we label as "gravitational force".
Examples
- A heavy object is in free fall. Its momentum changes as dp/dt = mdv/dt = ma =mg (if the mass m is constant), thus we call the quantity mg a "gravitational force" acting on the object. This is the definition of weight (w=mg) of an object.
- A heavy object on a table is pulled (attracted) downward toward the floor by the force of gravity (for example, its weight). At the same time, the table resists the downward force with equal upward force (called the normal force), resulting in zero net force, and no acceleration. (If the object is a person, he actually feels the normal force acting on him from below.)
- A heavy object on a table is gently pushed in a sideways direction by a finger. However, it doesn't move because the force of the finger on the object is now opposed by a new force of static friction, generated between the object and the table surface. This newly generated force exactly balances the force exerted on the object by the finger, and again no acceleration occurs. The static friction increases or decreases automatically. If the force of the finger is increased (up to a point), the opposing sideways force of static friction increases exactly to the point of perfect opposition.
- A heavy object on a table is pushed by a finger hard enough that static friction can't generate sufficient force to match the force exerted by the finger, and the object starts sliding across the surface. If the finger is moved with a constant velocity, it needs to apply a force that exactly cancels the force of kinetic friction from the surface of the table and then the object moves with the same constant velocity. Here it seems to the naive observer that application of a force produces a velocity (rather than an acceleration). However, the velocity is constant only because the force of the finger and the kinetic friction cancel each other. Without friction, the object would continually accelerate in response to a constant force.
- A heavy object reaches the edge of the table and falls. Now the object, subjected to the constant force of its weight, but freed of the normal force and friction forces from the table, gains in velocity in direct proportion to the time of fall, and thus (before it reaches velocities where air resistance forces becomes significant compared to gravity forces) its rate of gain in momentum and velocity is constant. These facts were first discovered by Galileo.
- A heavy object is suspended on a spring scale. Because object isn't moving (so time derivative of its momentum is zero) then along with acceleration of free fall g it has to experience equal and oppositely directed acceleration a=-g due to the action of the spring. This acceleration multiplied by the mass of the object is what we label as "spring reaction force" which is obviousely equal and opposite to object's weight mg. Knowing the mass (say, 1 kg) and the acceleration of free fall (say, 9.80 m/s^2) we can calibrate spring scale by a mark "9.8 N". Attaching various masses (2 kg, 3 kg ...) we can calibrate spring scale and then use this calibrated scale to measure many other forces (friction, reaction forces, elecric force, magnetic force, etc).
Quantitative definition
We have an intuitive grasp of the notion of force, since forces can be directly perceived as a push or pull. As with other physical concepts (for example
temperature), the intuitive notion is quantified using
operational definitions that are consistent with direct perception, but more precise. Historically, forces were first quantitatively investigated in conditions of
static equilibrium where several forces cancelled each other out. Such experiments prove the crucial properties that forces are additive
vector quantities: they've
magnitude and
direction. So, when two forces act on an object, the resulting force, the
resultant, is the
vector sum of the original forces. This is called the principle of
superposition. The magnitude of the resultant varies from the difference of the magnitudes of the two forces to their sum, depending on the angle between their lines of action. As with all vector addition this results in a
parallelogram rule: the addition of two vectors represented by sides of a parallelogram, gives an equivalent resultant vector which is equal in magnitude and direction to the transversal of the parallelogram.
As well as being added, forces can also be broken down (or 'resolved'). For example, a horizontal force pointing northeast can be split into two forces, one pointing north, and one pointing east. Summing these component forces using vector addition yields the original force. Force vectors can also be three-dimensional, with the third (vertical) component at right-angles to the two horizontal components.
The simplest case of static equilibrium is when two forces are equal in magnitude but opposite in direction. This remains the most usual way of measuring forces, using simple devices such as
weighing scales and
spring balances. Using such tools, several quantitative force laws were discovered: that the force of gravity is proportional to volume for objects made of a given material (widely exploited for millennia to define standard weights);
Archimedes' principle for buoyancy;
Archimedes' analysis of the
lever;
Boyle's law for gas pressure; and
Hooke's law for springs: all these were all formulated and experimentally verified before
Isaac Newton expounded his three laws of motion.
Force is sometimes defined using Newton's second law, as the product of
mass times
acceleration
where
is the
spring constant.
Nonconservative forces
For certain physical scenarios, it's impossible to model forces as being due to gradient of potentials. This is often due to macrophysical considerations which yield forces as arising from a macroscopic statistical average of
microstates. For example,
friction is caused by the gradients of numerous electrostatic potentials between the
atoms, but manifests as a force model which is independent of any macroscale position vector. Nonconservative forces other than
friction include other
contact forces,
tension,
compression, and
drag. However, for any sufficiently detailed description, all these forces are the results of conservative ones since each of these macroscopic forces are the net results of the gradients of microscopic potentials.
The connection between macroscopic non-conservative forces and microscopic conservative forces is described by detailed treatment with
statistical mechanics. In macroscopic closed systems, nonconservative forces act to change the
internal energies of the system and are often associated with the transfer of
heat. According to the
Second Law of Thermodynamics, nonconservative forces necessarily result in energy transformations within closed systems from ordered to more random conditions as
entropy increases.
Units of measurement
The
SI unit used to measure force is the
newton (symbol N), which is equivalent to kg·m·s
−2. The earlier
CGS unit is the
dyne. The relationship
F=
m·
a can be used with either of these. In
Imperial engineering units, if
F is measured in "
pounds force" or "lbf", and
a in feet per second squared, then
m must be measured in
slugs. Similarly, if mass is measured in
pounds mass, and
a in feet per second squared, the force must be measured in
poundals. The units of
slugs and
poundals are specifically designed to avoid a constant of proportionality in this equation.
A more general form
F=
k·
m·
a is needed if consistent units are not used. Here, the constant
k is a conversion factor dependent upon the units being used.
When the standard
g (an acceleration of 9.80665 m/s²) is used to define pounds force, the mass in pounds is numerically equal to the weight in pounds force. However, even at sea level on Earth, the actual acceleration of free fall is quite variable, over 0.53% more at the poles than at the equator. Thus, a mass of 1.0000 lb at
sea level at the equator exerts a force due to gravity of 0.9973 lbf, whereas a mass of 1.000 lb at
sea level at the poles exerts a force due to gravity of 1.0026 lbf. The normal average sea level acceleration on Earth (World Gravity Formula 1980) is 9.79764 m/s², so on average at
sea level on Earth, 1.0000 lb will exerts a force of 0.9991 lbf.
The equivalence 1 lb = 0.453 592 37 kg is always true, by definition, anywhere in the universe. If you use the standard
g which is official for defining kilograms force to define pounds force as well, then the same relationship will hold between pounds-force and kilograms-force (an old non-SI unit is still used). If a different value is used to define pounds force, then the relationship to kilograms force will be slightly different—but in any case, that relationship is also a constant anywhere in the universe. What isn't constant throughout the universe is the amount of force in terms of pounds-force (or any other force units) which 1 lb will exert due to gravity.
By analogy with the slug, there's a rarely used unit of mass called the "metric slug". This is the mass that accelerates at one metre per second squared when pushed by a force of one
kgf. An item with a mass of 10 kg has a mass of 1.01972661 metric slugs (= 10 kg divided by 9.80665 kg per metric slug). This unit is also known by various other names such as the
hyl, TME (from a German acronym), and mug (from metric slug).
Another unit of force called the
poundal (pdl) is defined as the force that accelerates 1 lbm at 1 foot per second squared. Given that 1 lbf = 32.174 lb times one foot per second squared, we've 1 lbf = 32.174 pdl.
The
kilogram-force is a unit of force that was used in various fields of science and technology. In 1901, the
CGPM improved the definition of the kilogram-force, adopting a standard acceleration of gravity for the purpose, and making the kilogram-force equal to the force exerted by a mass of 1 kg when accelerated by 9.80665 m/s². The kilogram-force isn't a part of the modern
SI system, but is still used in applications such as:
Thrust of jet and rocket engines
Spoke tension of bicycles
Draw weight of bows
Torque wrenches in units such as "meter kilograms" or "kilogram centimetres" (the kilograms are rarely identified as units of force)
Engine torque output (kgf·m expressed in various word orders, spellings, and symbols)
Pressure gauges in "kg/cm²" or "kgf/cm²"
In colloquial, non-scientific usage, the "kilograms" used for "weight" are almost always the proper SI units for this purpose. They are units of mass, not units of force.
The symbol "kgm" for kilograms is also sometimes encountered. This might occasionally be an attempt to distinguish kilograms as units of mass from the "kgf" symbol for the units of force. It might also be used as a symbol for those obsolete torque units (kilogram-force metres) mentioned above, used without properly separating the units for kilogram and metre with either a space or a centered dot.
Conversions
Below are several conversion factors between various measurements of force:
1 dyne = 10-5 newtons
1 kgf (kilopond kp) = 9.80665 newtons
1 metric slug = 9.80665 kg
1 lbf = 32.174 poundals
1 slug = 32.174 lb
1 kgf = 2.2046 lbf cvt
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