Work Calculator
Calculate the work done by a force acting on an object
Formula Used
W = Fd cos(θ)
Where: W = work, F = force, d = distance, θ = angle
Note: Work is positive when force aids motion, negative when opposing it
What Is Work in Physics?
Work in physics has a precise definition: it's the energy transferred to or from an object when a force acts on it through a displacement. Unlike everyday usage where "work" means effort, physics work requires both force and movement in the direction of that force. Holding a heavy box stationary does no work in physics terms—exhausting, but no energy transfer occurs.
Work is the bridge between force (cause) and energy (effect). When you push a box across the floor, you do work on it, transferring your muscular energy into the box's kinetic energy. This concept unifies mechanics with energy conservation.
| Scenario | Force Present? | Displacement? | Work Done? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pushing a stalled car | Yes | Yes | Yes (positive) |
| Holding a weight overhead | Yes | No | No (W = 0) |
| Carrying groceries horizontally | Yes (upward) | Yes (horizontal) | No (perpendicular) |
| Braking a car | Yes (friction) | Yes | Yes (negative) |
| Satellite in circular orbit | Yes (gravity) | Yes | No (perpendicular) |
Work Formula
Where:
- W= Work done (Joules)
- F= Applied force (Newtons)
- d= Displacement (meters)
- θ= Angle between force and displacement
Positive, Negative, and Zero Work
Work can be positive, negative, or zero depending on the angle between force and displacement. This sign indicates the direction of energy transfer—whether energy is added to or removed from the object.
| Angle (θ) | cos(θ) | Work Sign | Energy Effect | Example |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0° | +1 | Positive | Energy added | Pushing car forward |
| 0° < θ < 90° | 0 to +1 | Positive | Energy added (partial) | Pulling wagon at angle |
| 90° | 0 | Zero | No energy transfer | Carrying books horizontally |
| 90° < θ < 180° | -1 to 0 | Negative | Energy removed | Lowering weight slowly |
| 180° | -1 | Negative | Energy removed | Friction on sliding object |
Key insight: Positive work speeds things up or lifts them; negative work slows things down or lowers them. The total work by all forces equals the change in kinetic energy.
The Work-Energy Theorem
The work-energy theorem states that the net work done on an object equals its change in kinetic energy. This powerful principle provides an alternative to Newton's second law for solving problems, especially when forces vary or you only need initial and final states.
W_net = ΔKE = ½mv_f² - ½mv_i²
| Scenario | Net Work | Result |
|---|---|---|
| W_net > 0 | Positive | Object speeds up (KE increases) |
| W_net < 0 | Negative | Object slows down (KE decreases) |
| W_net = 0 | Zero | Speed unchanged (constant velocity) |
This theorem is particularly useful for calculating stopping distances, launch velocities, and analyzing collisions without tracking detailed motion.
Work-Energy Theorem
Where:
- W_net= Net work by all forces (J)
- ΔKE= Change in kinetic energy (J)
- v_f= Final velocity (m/s)
- v_i= Initial velocity (m/s)
Work by Variable Forces
When force varies along the path (like stretching a spring), we can't simply multiply F × d. Instead, work is calculated as the integral (area under the force-displacement curve). For common cases like springs, formulas are already derived.
| Force Type | Force Equation | Work Formula | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Constant force | F = constant | W = Fd cos(θ) | Simple multiplication |
| Spring force | F = -kx | W = ½kx² | Area of triangle |
| Gravitational (space) | F = GMm/r² | W = GMm(1/r₁ - 1/r₂) | Escape work calculation |
| General variable | F(x) | W = ∫F(x)dx | Requires calculus |
For springs: stretching from x₁ to x₂ requires work W = ½k(x₂² - x₁²). Starting from equilibrium (x₁ = 0): W = ½kx².
Work and Power
Power is the rate of doing work—how fast energy is transferred. The same amount of work done quickly requires more power than done slowly. This is why sprinting up stairs is more demanding than walking, even though the total work (lifting your body) is identical.
| Activity | Work Done | Time | Power Required |
|---|---|---|---|
| Walking up 3 floors (70 kg) | ~6,200 J | 60 s | ~100 W |
| Running up 3 floors (70 kg) | ~6,200 J | 15 s | ~410 W |
| Lifting 20 kg barbell 1 m | ~200 J | 2 s | 100 W |
| Olympic clean & jerk | ~200 J | 0.3 s | ~670 W |
| Elevator lifting 500 kg, 20 m | 98,000 J | 30 s | 3,267 W |
Power Formula
Where:
- P= Power (Watts)
- W= Work done (Joules)
- t= Time taken (seconds)
- F= Force (N)
- v= Velocity (m/s)
Conservative vs Non-Conservative Forces
Forces are classified by whether the work they do depends on the path taken. Conservative forces (gravity, springs) do path-independent work—only start and end positions matter. Non-conservative forces (friction, air resistance) depend on the path, typically removing mechanical energy as heat.
| Property | Conservative Forces | Non-Conservative Forces |
|---|---|---|
| Examples | Gravity, springs, electric | Friction, air resistance, tension |
| Path dependence | Work independent of path | Work depends on path |
| Round trip work | Zero (returns to start) | Always negative (energy lost) |
| Associated PE | Yes (can define PE) | No (no PE function) |
| Mechanical energy | Conserved | Decreases |
For problems with friction: W_net = W_conservative + W_friction, and W_friction = -f × d (always negative, always removes energy).
Applications of Work Calculations
Work calculations are essential in engineering, sports science, and everyday physics. Understanding work helps design efficient machines, analyze athletic performance, and solve practical problems.
| Application | Work Calculation | Practical Use |
|---|---|---|
| Car braking distance | W = ½mv² (KE to dissipate) | Safety regulations, road design |
| Elevator motors | W = mgh + losses | Motor sizing, energy costs |
| Weightlifting | W = mgh (per rep) | Training load calculation |
| Bicycle climbing | W = mgh + air drag work | Power meter training |
| Rocket launches | W = ∫F·dr (variable gravity) | Fuel requirements |
| Spring mechanisms | W = ½kx² | Clock designs, shock absorbers |
In practice, engineers must account for efficiency losses—motors aren't 100% efficient, friction exists, and air resistance increases with speed.
Worked Examples
Work Pushing a Box
Problem:
You push a 40 kg box across a floor with a force of 200 N at a 30° angle below horizontal. The box moves 5 m. How much work do you do?
Solution Steps:
- 1Identify values: F = 200 N, d = 5 m, θ = 30°
- 2Apply work formula: W = F × d × cos(θ)
- 3Calculate cos(30°) = 0.866
- 4Substitute: W = 200 × 5 × 0.866
- 5Calculate: W = 866 J
Result:
You do 866 Joules of work on the box. The vertical component of your push (200 × sin30° = 100 N) does no work but increases friction.
Work-Energy for Stopping Distance
Problem:
A 1,500 kg car traveling at 25 m/s brakes to a stop. The road provides 8,000 N of braking force. What is the stopping distance?
Solution Steps:
- 1Calculate initial KE: KE = ½ × 1500 × 25² = 468,750 J
- 2Work needed to stop = -468,750 J (removes all KE)
- 3Work by brakes: W = F × d × cos(180°) = -8000 × d
- 4Set equal: -8000 × d = -468,750
- 5Solve: d = 468,750 / 8,000 = 58.6 m
Result:
The car needs 58.6 meters to stop. Doubling speed would quadruple stopping distance to 234 m (KE ∝ v²).
Work Against Gravity
Problem:
A crane lifts a 2,000 kg container 15 m straight up in 45 seconds. Calculate the work done and power required.
Solution Steps:
- 1Work against gravity: W = mgh
- 2W = 2,000 × 9.8 × 15 = 294,000 J
- 3Power = Work / time
- 4P = 294,000 / 45 = 6,533 W
- 5Convert: 6,533 W = 6.53 kW ≈ 8.8 hp
Result:
The crane does 294,000 J (294 kJ) of work, requiring 6.53 kW of power. A typical small car engine (~100 hp) could theoretically do this in ~4 seconds.
Tips & Best Practices
- ✓Always identify the angle between force and displacement—it determines whether work is positive, negative, or zero.
- ✓Use the work-energy theorem to find final velocities or stopping distances without tracking detailed motion.
- ✓Remember: perpendicular forces (like normal force on a flat surface) do zero work because cos(90°) = 0.
- ✓For springs, work = ½kx² regardless of whether compressing or stretching.
- ✓Friction always does negative work, converting mechanical energy to heat.
- ✓When multiple forces act, calculate work by each separately, then sum: W_net = W₁ + W₂ + ...
- ✓Power = Work/time, so the same work done faster requires more power.
Frequently Asked Questions
Sources & References
Last updated: 2026-01-22