Difference between revisions of "Conservative force"
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Latest revision as of 13:58, April 6, 2017
Conservative forces are those that possess certain properties:[1]
- The work it does on a particle is independent of its trajectory.
- The work done on a particle that moves along a closed trajectory (where the initial and final positions are the same, or di = df) = 0) is zero.
- The force can be written as the negative of the gradient of a potential energy function, i.e.
. - The curl of the force,
is zero, 
When the only forces present in a system are conservative, energy is conserved.
Examples of conservative forces include:
Friction is an example of a non-conservative force:
References
- ↑ Serway and Beichner, Physics for Scientists and Engineers, Fifth Edition