In physics, work is done when a force causes a displacement of an object in the direction of the force. If you push a box across a floor, you do work. If you push against a solid wall and nothing moves, no work is done — no matter how tired you feel.
Here F is the force (N), x is the displacement (m), and θ is the angle between the force and the displacement. The unit of work is the joule (J): 1 J = 1 N m.
When the force acts parallel to the displacement (θ = 0°), cos θ = 1 and W = Fx. When the force is perpendicular (θ = 90°), cos θ = 0 and no work is done. This is why a satellite in circular orbit experiences no work done by gravity — the force is always perpendicular to the velocity.
Work done = energy transferred. When a force does positive work on an object, energy is transferred to the object. Negative work means energy is transferred from it. This is the crucial link between force and energy.
The principle of conservation of energy states that energy cannot be created or destroyed — it can only be transferred from one form to another. The total energy of a closed system remains constant. Energy exists in many forms: kinetic, gravitational potential, thermal, elastic, nuclear, chemical, electromagnetic. It can be transferred between these forms, but the total always stays the same.
This principle constrains what is physically possible: no machine can output more energy than is put in, and no process can simply make energy vanish.