« Back to AP Physics Guide / Unit C3: Work & Energy (Mechanics) / Variable Forces & Integrals
When a force is not constant,
fails. You must integrate the force over the distance traveled.
In AP Physics 1, you learned that Work is Force multiplied by distance (
). However, that formula only works if the force is perfectly constant. What happens if you are pulling a spring that gets harder to stretch the further you pull it? Or if you are launching a rocket, and gravity gets weaker the higher it goes? You must use Integration.
1. Work as a Line Integral
Work is formally defined as the dot product of the Force vector and the infinitesimal displacement vector (
), integrated over the path of the object.
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2. Potential Energy & The Force Gradient
If a force is conservative (like gravity or a spring), the work it does can be stored as Potential Energy (
). The relationship between Conservative Force and Potential Energy is a two-way mathematical street: you integrate Force to get Energy, and you differentiate Energy to get Force.
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3. Stable vs. Unstable Equilibrium
An object is in equilibrium whenever the net force on it is zero. Mathematically, since
, equilibrium occurs wherever the slope of the
graph is zero (horizontal tangent).
- Stable Equilibrium: Occurs at a local minimum (the bottom of a well). If you push the object slightly, a restoring force pushes it back to the center. (e.g., A marble at the bottom of a bowl).
- Unstable Equilibrium: Occurs at a local maximum (the top of a hill). If you push the object slightly, the force accelerates it away from the center. (e.g., A marble balanced on top of a flipped bowl).
4. Quick AP Practice
📚 Unit C3 Mastery Challenge
1. The potential energy of a particle moving along the x-axis is given by
. At what position
is the particle in equilibrium?
Check Answer
Equilibrium occurs where Force is zero. Force is the negative derivative of Potential Energy:Set
2. A varying force
acts on an object. How much work is done by this force as the object moves from
to
?
