[[File:Tug Of War Tension.png|thumb|upright=1.35|Nine men pull on a rope. The rope in the photo extends into a drawn illustration showing adjacent segments of the rope.
One segment is duplicated in a free body diagram showing a pair of action-reaction forces of magnitude T pulling the segment in opposite directions, where T is transmitted axially and is called the tension force. This end of the rope is pulling the tug of war team to the right.
Each segment of the rope is pulled by the two neighboring segments, stressing the segment in what is also called tension.]]
Tension is the pulling or stretching force transmitted axially along an object such as a string, rope, chain, rod, truss member, or other object, so as to stretch or pull apart the object. In terms of force, it is the opposite of compression. Tension might also be described as the action-reaction pair of forces acting at each end of an object.
At the atomic level, when atoms or molecules are pulled apart from each other and gain potential energy with a restoring force still existing, the restoring force might create what is also called tension. Each end of a string or rod under such tension could pull on the object it is attached to, in order to restore the string/rod to its relaxed length.
Tension (as a transmitted force, as an action-reaction pair of forces, or as a restoring force) is measured in newtons in the International System of Units (or pounds-force in Imperial units). The ends of a string or other object transmitting tension will exert forces on the objects to which the string or rod is connected, in the direction of the string at the point of attachment. These forces due to tension are also called "passive forces". There are two basic possibilities for systems of objects held by strings: Physics for Scientists and Engineers with Modern Physics, Section 5.7. Seventh Edition, Brooks/Cole Cengage Learning, 2008. either acceleration is zero and the system is therefore in equilibrium, or there is acceleration, and therefore a net force is present in the system.
If the string has curvature, then the two pulls on a segment by its two neighbors will not add to zero, and there will be a net force on that segment of the string, causing an acceleration. This net force is a restoring force, and the motion of the string can include that solve the equation central to Sturm–Liouville theory: where is the force constant per unit length units and are the for resonances of transverse displacement on the string,A. Fetter and J. Walecka. (1980). Theoretical Mechanics of Particles and Continua. New York: McGraw-Hill. with solutions that include the various harmonics on a stringed instrument.
Thus, one can obtain a scalar analogous to tension by taking the trace of the stress tensor.Jayachandran, Arul. Design of Tension Members: Mechanical Properties and Block Shear Failure, Exercises of Civil Engineering April 9, 2014. Illinois Institute of Technology
For example, consider a system consisting of an object that is being lowered vertically by a string with tension, T, at a constant velocity. The system has a constant velocity and is therefore in equilibrium because the tension in the string, which is pulling up on the object, is equal to the weight force, mg ("m" is mass, "g" is the acceleration caused by the gravity of Earth), which is pulling down on the object.
For example, consider the same system as above but suppose the object is now being lowered with an increasing velocity downwards (positive acceleration) therefore there exists a net force somewhere in the system. In this case, negative acceleration would indicate that .
In another example, suppose that two bodies A and B having masses and , respectively, are connected with each other by an inextensible string over a frictionless pulley. There are two forces acting on the body A: its weight () pulling down, and the tension in the string pulling up. Therefore, the net force on body A is , so . In an extensible string, Hooke's law applies.
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