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1 February, 23:26

ou have just moved into a new apartment and are trying to arrange your bedroom. You would like to move your dresser of weight 3,500 NN across the carpet to a spot 5 mm away on the opposite wall. Hoping to just slide your dresser easily across the floor, you do not empty your clothes out of the drawers before trying to move it. You push with all your might but cannot move the dresser before becoming completely exhausted. How much work do you do on the dress

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  1. 2 February, 01:03
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    So far, since you moved into the apartment until the end of this much of the story, you haven't done ANY work on the dresser yet.

    I'll admit that you pushed, groaned and grunted, sweated and strained plenty. You're physically and mentally exhausted, you're not interested in the dresser at the moment, and right now you just want to snappa cappa brew, crash on the couch, and watch cartoons on TV. But if you've done your Physics homework, you know you haven't technically done any work yet.

    In Physics, "Work" is the product of Force times Distance.

    Since the dresser hasn't budged yet, the Distahce is zero. So no matter how great the Force may be, it's multiplied by zero, so the Work is zero.
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