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Answer
The Principle of Least Action does not say that forces are ignored; instead, the forces appear inside the Lagrangian through the potential energy term, so the action depends on them. By varying the action, we obtain the Euler–Lagrange equations, which are exactly Newton’s equations that include the forces acting on the system. Thus the path that makes the action stationary is the one that satisfies the correct equations of motion, not one where forces are absent. For example, for a mass on a spring, the Lagrangian \(L=\tfrac12mv^2-\tfrac12 kx^2\) leads to the equation \(m\ddot x=-kx\), showing the spring force determines the trajectory. In short, the principle incorporates forces and predicts the trajectory that satisfies Newton’s laws.
Detailed Explanation
The Principle of Least Action says a system chooses the path that gives the lowest action. Other options are incorrect because People think "least action" means forces are irrelevant, but the action integral is built from energy terms that include forces.
Key Concepts
Principle of Least Action
Newton's Laws
Action and Energy
Topic
Classical Mechanics Principles
Difficulty
easy level question
Cognitive Level
understand
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