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Line of action

In physics, the line of action of a force F is a geometric representation of how the force is applied. It is the line through the point at which the force is applied in the same direction as the vector F→. In physics, the line of action of a force F is a geometric representation of how the force is applied. It is the line through the point at which the force is applied in the same direction as the vector F→. The concept is essential, for instance, for understanding the net effect of multiple forces applied to a body. For example, if two forces of equal magnitude act upon a rigid body along the same line of action but in opposite directions, they cancel and have no net effect. But if, instead, their lines of action are not identical, but merely parallel, then their effect is to create a moment on the body, which tends to rotate it. For the simple geometry associated with the figure, we have three equivalent equations for the magnitude of the torque associated with a force F → {displaystyle {vec {F}}} directed at displacement r → {displaystyle {vec {r}}} from the axis whenever the force is perpendicular to the axis: where r → × F → {displaystyle {vec {r}} imes {vec {F}}} is the cross-product, F ⊥ {displaystyle F_{perp }} is the component of F → {displaystyle {vec {F}}} perpendicular to r ^ {displaystyle {hat {r}}} , r ⊥ {displaystyle r_{perp }} is the moment arm, and θ {displaystyle heta } is the angle between r → {displaystyle {vec {r}}} and F → {displaystyle {vec {F}}}

[ "Quantum mechanics", "Structural engineering", "Classical mechanics", "Mechanical engineering", "Engineering drawing" ]
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