Newton-metre

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Template:Short description Template:For Template:Infobox unit The newton-metre or newton-meter (also non-hyphenated, newton metre or newton meter; symbol N⋅m[1] or N m[1])Template:Efn is the unit of torque (also called Template:Em) in the International System of Units (SI). One newton-metre is equal to the torque resulting from a force of one newton applied perpendicularly to the end of a moment arm that is one metre long.

The unit is also used less commonly as a unit of work, or energy, in which case it is equivalent to the more common and standard SI unit of energy, the joule.[2] In this usage the metre term represents the distance travelled or displacement in the direction of the force, and not the perpendicular distance from a fulcrum (i.e. the lever arm length) as it does when used to express torque. This usage is generally discouraged,[3] since it can lead to confusion as to whether a given quantity expressed in newton-metres is a torque or a quantity of energy.[4] "Even though torque has the same dimension as energy (SI unit joule), the joule is never used for expressing torque".[4]

Newton-metres and joules are dimensionally equivalent in the sense that they have the same expression in SI base units,

1Nm=1kgm2s2,1J=1kgm2s2

but are distinguished in terms of applicable kind of quantity, to avoid misunderstandings when a torque is mistaken for an energy or vice versa. Similar examples of dimensionally equivalent units include Pa versus J/m3, Bq versus Hz, and ohm versus ohm per square.

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Conversion factors

See also

Notes

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References

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  1. 1.0 1.1 Template:Cite web
  2. For example: Eshbach's handbook of engineering fundamentals - 10.4 Engineering Thermodynamics and Heat Transfer "In SI units the basic unit of energy is newton-metre".
  3. Fundamentals of Physics, 9th edition by Halliday Resnick Walker, p. 309. "The SI unit of torque is the newton-meter. In our discussion of energy we called this combination the joule. But torque is not work and torque should be expressed in newton-meters, not joules. google books link
  4. 4.0 4.1 Template:Cite web
  5. Mechanical Engineering Formulas Pocket Guide, p6
  6. Concise encyclopedia of plastics, by Donald V. Rosato, Marlene G. Rosato, Dominick V. Rosato, p621