2. A natural power or effect that is able to change the speed or direction of something: The force of the earthquake caused the dishes to fall off the shelves and break.
Many people simply cannot accept the use of force to solve such minor problems.
What could you possibly like about professional wrestling? Is it the brute force that they exhibit?
Well, what I like most about professional wrestling is the brute farce which they perform.
2. Physical power, effort, or violence used against someone or something that resists what is being attempted against him/her or it.
3. The condition of being effective, valid, or applicable: "The police were accused of using excessive force when they arrested the drunk man."
4. Power or strength that is intellectual or moral rather than physical: "The audience was convinced by the force of her presentation."
5. Someone, or something, that has great power or influence; especially, in a particular field of endeavor: "He has been the driving force behind these political changes."
6. A body of military personnel, ships, or aircraft brought together to fight in a battle or a war: "Naval and army task forces were sent to the area."
7. A professional body of police officers.
8. A group of people who work together for a particular purpose; such as, an educational force.
9. A physical influence that tends to change the position of an object with mass, equal to the rate of change in momentum of the object.
10. To make someone do something the he or she does not want to do: "They forced all of us to work more hours with the same pay that we were receiving before."
11. Etymology: from Old French force, from Late Latin fortia; from Latin fortis, "strong".
2. The electric lines of force that make up an electric field or region.
3. The integral over a surface of the component of the electric displacement perpendicular to the surface and equal to the number of electric lines of forces crossing the surface.
Electromagnetic force stops solids from falling apart, and acts between all particles with electric charges.
The elementary particle which is the carrier for the electromagnetic force is the photon.
2. The electric potential, or ability of electric energy to perform work.
Electromotive force is usually measured in joules per coulomb, or volts; and the higher the voltage, the greater the potential of electric energy.
Any device; such as, a storage battery, that converts some form of energy into electricity is a source of electromotive force or EMF or emf; or, a generator produces an electromotive force.
3. The difference in electric potential, or voltage, between the terminals of a source of electricity; such as, a battery from which no current is being drawn. When current is drawn, the potential difference drops below the emf value.4. The force that causes a flow or the movement of electrons through an electrical circuit.
It is the amount of energy derived from an electric source in one second when one unit of current is passing through the source, commonly measured in volts.
Electromotive force is produced by differences in electrical charge or potential.
5. Energy per unit electric charge that is imparted by an energy source; such as, an electric generator or a battery.When the device does work on the electric charge being transferred within itself, energy is converted from one form to another.
If the charges are of the same sign, then the force is repulsive; if they are of opposite signs, the force is attractive.
The strength of the force is described by Coulomb's law or a law that was formulated by Charles Augustin de Coulomb (1736-1806), French physicist, which describes the electric forces between charged objects.
The law states that:
- like charges repel each other and unlike charges attract each other,
- the attraction or repulsion acts along the line between the two charges,
- the size of the force varies inversely as the square of the distance between the two charges,
- the size of the force is proportional to the value of each charge.
3. A force on a charged particle resulting from an electrostatic field, equal to the electric field vector times the charge of the particle.
4. Like charges in close proximity produce forces of repulsion between them; consequently, if two surfaces bear appreciable and approximately equal densities of charged groups on their surfaces appreciable forces of repulsion may occur between them.
The range of these forces is determined primarily by the ionic strength of the intervening medium, forces being of minimal range at high ionic strength.
The forces are effective over approximately twice the double layer of their thickness.
2. A superior or overpowering force or a force that is superior in power and impossible to resist.
3. An unexpected or uncontrollable event.
4. A natural and unavoidable catastrophe that interrupts the expected course of events.
5. A contract provision that excuses a performance if it is rendered impractical by an strong event; sometimes it is referred to as an "Act of God"; for example, a fire or a natural event; such as, a flood, terrible snow storm, etc.
This term is French for "a greater force."
2. The ratio of the output force to the input force for a machine which transmits mechanical energy: "Mechanical advantage is the work produced by a machine, divided by the force applied to it".
"Actual machines can provide a mechanical advantage that is greater than unity (number or numeral one, oneness); however, the greater the mechanical advantage, the greater the distance which the input force must move in relation to the output force."
It is directed towards the center of the circle. In the absence of this effect, the object would move in a straight line tangential to the circle or keep going in a straight line.
Cars need aid going around corners; so, objects tend to travel in straight lines unless centripetal force bends their motion around into a curve.
If the satellite and primary body are of similar composition, the theoretical limit is about two and a half times the radius of the larger body.
The rings of Saturn lie inside Saturn's Roche limit and may be the debris of a demolished moon.
The limit was first calculated by the French astronomer Édouard Roche (1820–83). Artificial satellites are too small to develop substantial tidal stresses.
Such a force is responsible for the tides, and for the breakup of a body straying within the Roche limit of a planet.
When comets pass close to a massive body like the sun or Jupiter, they may break up due, at least in part, to the tidal forces encountered.
2. Etymology: from French, "a significant feat of strength."