body force
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Body forceFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A body force is a force that acts throughout the volume of a body, in contrast to contact forces.
Gravity and electromagnetic forces are examples of body forces. Centrifugal and Coriolis forces can also be
viewed as body forces.
This can be put into contrast to the classical definition of surface forces which are supposed to be exerted to the
surface of an object. Shear forces and normal forces occurring in physical and engineering circumstances aresupposed to be surface forces and exerted to the surface of an object. All cohesive surface attraction and
contact forces between objects are also considered as surface forces.
Definition
A body force is simply a type of force, and so it has the same dimensions as force (mass times length per time
squared). However, it is often convenient to talk about a body force in terms of either the force per unit volume
or the force per unit mass. If the force per unit volume is of interest, it is referred to as the force density
throughout the system.
A body force is distinct from a contact force in that the force does not require contact for transmission. Thus,
common forces associated with pressure gradients and conductive and convective heat transmission are not
body forces as they require contact between systems to exist. Radiation heat transfer, on the other hand, is a
perfect example of a body force.
Examples of common body forces include:
Gravity
An electric force acting on an object that is charged throughout its volume
Magnetic forces acting on currents within an object, such as the braking force that results from
eddy currents
Inertial forces (often called "fictitious forces") can be viewed as body forces. Common inertial forces are
Centrifugal force
Coriolis force
transverse force or Euler force, which occurs in a rotating reference frame when the rate of
rotation of the frame is changing
It is worth noting that inertial forces are not actually forces. Rather they are corrections to Newton's second
law when it is formulated in an accelerating reference frame.
Acceleration
Like any other force, a body force will cause an object to accelerate. For a non-rigid object the acceleration of a
volume element would be found by
,
where is the density of the substance at point and (lowercase) f is the force density. This is simply
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Newton's second law formulated to apply to a small volume element.
In the case of gravity a(r) is simply the gravitational field.
The entirety of the body force acting upon a system can be found by integrating the force density throughout a
volume of interest.
,
where dV is an infinitesimal volume element and f is the force density within the system.
See also
Fictitious force
Force density
Normal force
Surface forceRetrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Body_force"
Categories: Force
This page was last modified on 22 July 2011 at 01:17.
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force - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bo
9/6/2011