Hooke’s Law explains how a spring stretches or compresses when you apply a force. It says:
The more force you apply to a spring, the more it stretches—but only up to a limit.
Formula for Hooke’s Law:
F=k x
Where:
F (Force, in Newtons) → The force applied to the spring.
k (Spring constant, in N/m) → A measure of how stiff the spring is. Higher k means a tougher spring.
x (Extension, in meters) → How much the spring stretches or compresses.
Rearranging the Formula:
You wrote k=F/x, which is just another way to write Hooke’s Law when solving for k.
This means:
Spring constant=Force applied Stretch or compression\text{Spring constant} = \frac{\text{Force applied}}{\text{Stretch or compression}}Spring constant=Stretch or compression Force applied
Example:
If you apply 10 Newtons of force to a spring and it stretches 0.2 meters, the spring constant is:
50N/m
This tells us the spring is pretty stiff!
Key Things to Remember:
Hooke’s Law works only within the elastic limit—if you stretch too much, the spring won’t return to its original shape.
Higher k means a stiffer spring (harder to stretch).
If no force is applied, the spring stays at its normal length.



















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1. Hooke’s Law & DeformationElastic = returns to shape ✔️Plastic = stays stretched ❌
2. UnitsForce = NSpring constant (k) = N/mDisplacement (x) = m
3. UsesCar shocks, trampolines, scales, pens, springs in machines
4. Test ItHang spring → add weights → measure stretch → straight line = Hooke’s Law
5. Limits Only works before the material stretches too far
6. Springs in Series & Parallel Series = weaker Parallel = stronger