Consider a particle which is free to move in any direction, and which is held in equilibrium by some general system of forces whose resultant is zero. In Fig. 1 one of the forces of the system,
We now imagine that the particle is given some arbitrary infinitesimal displacement

We next compute the work
For all of the forces in the system:
Writing this in terms of components along a system of rectangular coordinates, we have:
If we consider the case in which the forces acting on the particle form a system in equilibrium, we have:
We next examine the conditions under which the converse statement is true, i.e., the conditions under which the statement
We therefore define a virtual displacement of a free particle as any arbitrary, infinitesimal displacement for which
The principle of virtual displacements1 thus states that the condition for the equilibrium of a free particle is that the work done upon any virtual displacement of the particle should be equal to zero.
- This principle of virtual displacements is in some books called the principle of “virtual velocities.” The application of the method would be the same, of course, whether one conceives of giving the various points of the system certain velocities, or certain displacements, since the ratios between the velocities of the various points would be the same as the ratios between the displacements of these points.↩︎