> Is torque the only factor for loosening a nut? Most people are familiar with an impact wrench, which applies impulses of high torque. A related question is: Does the “impulse” part of an impact wrench actually matter(?) or is this simply a means of achieving increased torque, by storing energy and releasing as a strong blow?
An impact wrench works by releasing stored energy. The shorter the angle it does this over, the more torque it can apply. Just like "force times distance" in a line equals energy, "torque times angular displacement" about a point also equals energy.
If you watch an impact driver work to loosen a nut, you will see initially it moves the nut only infinitesimally with each impact... This is because the nut is tight and the torque required for movement is high, so the available energy can only move it a small angular displacement... As the nut loosens, and the required torque for movement reduces, and the nut moves much further with each impact (of the same energy).
To answer your question, yes, it is only torque that loosens (or tightens) a nut -- you can apply it gradually steady state with no impulse and achieve the same result -- this is how a torque wrench works, approaching and never exceeding the desired torque. (In general, torque wrenches should never be used for loosening a nut, and impact wrenches should never be used for tightening one -- despite what you see at tire repair shops!)
What is really happening as the nut is tightened is the bolt is stretching, causing a normal (or clamping) force across the face of the nut against the thing being clamped (and also on the threads), which in turn causes the friction coefficient between the nut and the thing being clamped (and also the bolt threads) to resist the nut rotating.
The equation for friction between two objects is simply that the available (sideways) friction force is the friction coefficient (typically a value between 0 and 1) times the normal force (perpendicular to the friction force). It is this friction that the torque needs to overcome to rotate a nut.
(In some materials there can be "stiction" as well, which is a static force that needs to be overcome for initial movement, which adds to the friction, but this is small in the nut/bolt scenario.)