A copy and paste from Grahams above link;
The Force does the Work, not the agent that created the Force. Do not confuse the work you do to create a force with the work done by the force you create; they are not the same. The force you exert holding a 100 pound barbell above your head does no work on the barbell while the barbell is at rest, but you do work (on a molecular level) to create that force.
Barbell, book or helicopter, no work is done if the mass is stationary and that is my point.
Ralph wrote:
Holding a book steadily at arm's length, for example, does not involve any work, irrespective of the apparent effort required...
Incorrect. There's lot's of work going on inside the body such as muscle twitching, heating, etc. I didn't think that was any great mystery???
There is a lot of work going on inside the body just as their is in the helicopter blades but no work is done if the mass is stationary.
Yes, of course. Ralph, it surprises me that you persist with an argument based on such arbitrary imposed limits.
It surprises me even more, all we are doing is debating the terminology of the word 'work'. If I lift a book from point A to point B and drop it, you will say no work was done as I had to create a force Resistance to gravity. You cannot seem to except the fact that yes work was done lifting the book from A to B and gravity supplied the force to move it from B to A. Work was accomplished in both direction using force.
Then some one will say that no work was done as the book has returned to its original position. I say work was done by gravity going from B to A.
Doesn't it seem incomplete to apply this limited view to falling books when you already know that books don't just fall from nowhere? You seem reluctant to consider the full account.
True books do not fall from just anywhere. I do consider the full account. Work was performed to get the book anywhere and gravity performed work returning it. Energy was spent and the fact remains work was done.
And by the way with this view in mind the helicopter blades did not do work as the air returned to its ambient state.
Talking to a windmill operator about the physical properties of wind would probably seem pointless to him - he doesn't need to know the relationship between pressure and heat in gas in order to mill wheat. So then what does one talk to a windmill operator about, besides the milling and the weather?
Truer words were never spoken, he has wheat to mill and I for one have wheel designs to physically research. Talk to me about gravity wheels, not the meanings of a four letter word called 'work'.
Graham if you deem that gravity is not a force capable of performing work and when a mass is retained by another force such as a person, no work is accomplished on the mass. Then what are your muscles retaining that Fletcher says is work?
Please do not misunderstand me as Fletcher is correct, he simply is not looking at the subject from my point of view. If it takes work to hold up a book in a non-working status then their must be an opposing force, it is called gravity.
Enough! I have wheat to grind and a lawn to mow! No more 'armchair philosophy' for a while please. I do not need to hear that mowing my lawn is not work as will grow back. All in jest please! :-)
Ralph