Sy123
This too shall pass
- Joined
- Nov 6, 2011
- Messages
- 3,730
- Gender
- Male
- HSC
- 2013
It is given that the torque is:
(disregarding the angle by which the force is applied, which just results in a trivial trigonometry problem)
How do you prove this formula? I have been told that torque by definition is the distance multiplied by the force. But I don't see how you can do that.
I don't see why it must randomly be a multiplication of 2 variables that have to do with turning force, or rather the operation between them has to be multiplication.
Why can't it be: for instance, I mean as d increases so does torque so that it follows the same pattern as multiplication.
So can you prove the formula for torque? And if its like that by definition why multiplication?
(disregarding the angle by which the force is applied, which just results in a trivial trigonometry problem)
How do you prove this formula? I have been told that torque by definition is the distance multiplied by the force. But I don't see how you can do that.
I don't see why it must randomly be a multiplication of 2 variables that have to do with turning force, or rather the operation between them has to be multiplication.
Why can't it be: for instance, I mean as d increases so does torque so that it follows the same pattern as multiplication.
So can you prove the formula for torque? And if its like that by definition why multiplication?