An image illustrating the force of gravity on an object, featuring a 4.0 kg object being lifted and then lowered by 1.5 m. The scene begins on the ground, where the object rests, and shows a visible, but not labeled, distance marking to represent the 1.5 m height. The subsequent two images depict the individual actions of the object being raised and then lowered. The direction of movement should be discernible without physical arrows. Please do not include any numerical or textual information as per the original request.

A 4.0 kg object is lifted 1.5 m. (a) how much work is done against the earth's gravity ? (b) repeat if the object is lowered insteadof lifted

-58.86J

F=mg

m=4kg
g=9.81
W=Fxd
W=4(9.81)(1.5)
=58.86 or 59 J

To find the amount of work done against the Earth's gravity, we can use the formula:

Work = Force × Distance × cos(θ)

where:
- Force is the weight of the object, which is the product of its mass (m) and acceleration due to gravity (g).
- Distance is the height through which the object is lifted or lowered.
- θ is the angle between the force vector and the direction of displacement.

Let's calculate the work done for both scenarios.

(a) When the object is lifted:
Weight = mass × acceleration due to gravity = 4.0 kg × 9.8 m/s² ≈ 39.2 N
Distance = 1.5 m
θ = 0° (since the force and displacement are in the same direction)

Work = 39.2 N × 1.5 m × cos(0°)
Work = 39.2 N × 1.5 m × 1
Work = 58.8 joules

Therefore, 58.8 joules of work is done against the Earth's gravity when the object is lifted.

(b) When the object is lowered:
In this case, the force and displacement are in opposite directions, so the angle θ is 180°.

Work = 39.2 N × 1.5 m × cos(180°)
Since cos(180°) = -1, the negative sign indicates that the work is done by the Earth's gravity, not against it.

Work = 39.2 N × 1.5 m × (-1)
Work = -58.8 joules

Therefore, when the object is lowered, the work done against the Earth's gravity is -58.8 joules, indicating that the Earth's gravity is doing the work.

The definition of work is (force) x (distance moved in the direction of the force)

(a) In this case, the force is M*g.
I assume that you know the value of g.
M is the mass. Complete the calculation.

(b) Change the sign of the previous answer. Negative work is done by whatever is lowering the weight.

Force X Displacement

Force=mass X gravity
=> m g s
= 4 x 10 x -1.5
= -60 J

Wrong*

Answer