conservation of energy. work to do work on an object you need an application of a force and movement...

39
Conservation of Energy

Upload: bailey-diaz

Post on 26-Mar-2015

219 views

Category:

Documents


4 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Conservation of Energy. Work To do work on an object you need an application of a force AND movement due to the force. Example: Lifting a barbell. A force

Conservation of Energy

Page 2: Conservation of Energy. Work To do work on an object you need an application of a force AND movement due to the force. Example: Lifting a barbell. A force

Work

• To do work on an object you need an application of a force AND movement due to the force.

Example: Lifting a barbell. A force is applied to the barbell and the barbell moves in the direction of the force

• If there is no movement, there is NO work being done on an object.

Page 3: Conservation of Energy. Work To do work on an object you need an application of a force AND movement due to the force. Example: Lifting a barbell. A force

Work:Work: force times displacement; when force times displacement; when a force is applied at a constant velocity a force is applied at a constant velocity in the same direction.in the same direction. The movement must be along the same plane

as the force applied. Units: Joule (J)

Equation: W = FdW = Fd• W = Work (J)• F = Force (N)• d = Distance (m)

Page 4: Conservation of Energy. Work To do work on an object you need an application of a force AND movement due to the force. Example: Lifting a barbell. A force

Check Your Understanding

A man holds a 50 lbs box in the air. Is he A man holds a 50 lbs box in the air. Is he doing any work?doing any work?

No. Even though his muscles are getting tired, according to physics he is not doing any work because there is no displacement of the box. No movement means no work.

Page 5: Conservation of Energy. Work To do work on an object you need an application of a force AND movement due to the force. Example: Lifting a barbell. A force

Work, Force and Displacement

• Work is directly proportional to force (displacement stays the same).

2F = 2W

½F = ½W

• Work is directly proportional to displacement (force stays the same).

2d = 2W

½d = ½W

Page 6: Conservation of Energy. Work To do work on an object you need an application of a force AND movement due to the force. Example: Lifting a barbell. A force

Check Your UnderstandingCheck Your Understanding

Work is done lifting a barbell. How much Work is done lifting a barbell. How much more work is done lifting a twice as more work is done lifting a twice as heavy barbell the same distance?heavy barbell the same distance?

Twice as much work. Force and work are directly proportional, so if you double force then you double the work.

W = F d2W = 2F d

Page 7: Conservation of Energy. Work To do work on an object you need an application of a force AND movement due to the force. Example: Lifting a barbell. A force

How much work is done lifting a twice How much work is done lifting a twice as heavy barbell twice as far?as heavy barbell twice as far?

Four times as much work

W = F d

4W = 2F 2d

In this case, both the force and the distance were doubled thereby causing four times as much work to be done.

Check Your UnderstandingCheck Your Understanding

Page 8: Conservation of Energy. Work To do work on an object you need an application of a force AND movement due to the force. Example: Lifting a barbell. A force

Check Your UnderstandingCheck Your Understanding

An object is accelerating for 5 meters. If a force of 30 N is being applied to the object, what is the work done on the object?

W= ?F = 30 Nd = 5 mW = Fd

W = (30 N)(5m) = 150 J

Page 9: Conservation of Energy. Work To do work on an object you need an application of a force AND movement due to the force. Example: Lifting a barbell. A force

Power

• The quantity work has to do with a force causing a displacement. Work has nothing to do with the amount of time that this force acts to cause the displacement.

• Power describes how quickly work gets done.

Page 10: Conservation of Energy. Work To do work on an object you need an application of a force AND movement due to the force. Example: Lifting a barbell. A force

Power:Power: the rate at which work is the rate at which work is done.done. The less time it takes for work to be done, the

greater the power. Unit: Watt (W)

Equation: P = W / tP = W / t• P = Power (Watts)• W = Work (Joules)• t = time (seconds)

Page 11: Conservation of Energy. Work To do work on an object you need an application of a force AND movement due to the force. Example: Lifting a barbell. A force

Power, Work, and Time

• Power is directly proportional to work

2W = 2P

½W = ½P• Power is inversely proportional to time

2t = ½P

½t = 2P

Page 12: Conservation of Energy. Work To do work on an object you need an application of a force AND movement due to the force. Example: Lifting a barbell. A force

Check Your UnderstandingCheck Your UnderstandingTwo physics students, Will N. Andable and Ben Two physics students, Will N. Andable and Ben

Pumpiniron, are in the weightlifting room. Will Pumpiniron, are in the weightlifting room. Will lifts the 100-pound barbell over his head 10 lifts the 100-pound barbell over his head 10 times in one minute; Ben lifts the 100-pound times in one minute; Ben lifts the 100-pound barbell over his head 10 times in 10 seconds. barbell over his head 10 times in 10 seconds. Which did the most work? Which student Which did the most work? Which student delivers the most power? Explain.delivers the most power? Explain.

Both did the same amount ofwork (Fd). Ben did his work more quickly, so he used more power.

Page 13: Conservation of Energy. Work To do work on an object you need an application of a force AND movement due to the force. Example: Lifting a barbell. A force

Check Your UnderstandingCheck Your Understanding

Identical twins are late to class. One twin runs Identical twins are late to class. One twin runs up the stairs while the other twin walks up up the stairs while the other twin walks up the stairs. Which twin did more work?the stairs. Which twin did more work?

Both twins applied the same force over the same distance. The twins did the same amount of work.

Which twin used more power?Which twin used more power?

Both twins did the same amount of work; however, the twin that ran did the work more quickly and therefore used more power.

Page 14: Conservation of Energy. Work To do work on an object you need an application of a force AND movement due to the force. Example: Lifting a barbell. A force

Check Your UnderstandingCheck Your Understanding

If an object has a work of 20 J exerted on it for a time of 4 seconds, what is the power?

P = ?

W = 20 J

t = 4 s

P = W/t

P = 20 J/4s = 5 Watts

Page 15: Conservation of Energy. Work To do work on an object you need an application of a force AND movement due to the force. Example: Lifting a barbell. A force

Mechanical Energy

• Mechanical energy can be either kinetic energy (energy of motion) or potential energy (stored energy of position).

Mechanical energy:Mechanical energy: the energy the energy which is possessed by an object due to which is possessed by an object due to its motion or its stored energy of its motion or its stored energy of positionposition Mechanical energy is the ability to do work SI Unit: Joule (J) Ex: KE and PE

Page 16: Conservation of Energy. Work To do work on an object you need an application of a force AND movement due to the force. Example: Lifting a barbell. A force

Potential Energy

Potential energy:Potential energy: stored energy due stored energy due to position.to position. PE has the potential to do work SI Unit: Joule (J) Ex: Elastic and Gravitational Potential

Energy

Page 17: Conservation of Energy. Work To do work on an object you need an application of a force AND movement due to the force. Example: Lifting a barbell. A force

Gravitational Potential Energy

Gravitational potential energy:Gravitational potential energy: energy that is stored in an object due energy that is stored in an object due to its heightto its height

An object has the potential to fall SI Unit: Joule (J)

Equation: PEPEGG = mgh = mgh• PEG = Gravitational PE (J)• M = mass (kg)• G = acceleration due to gravity (10m/s2)• H = height (m)

Page 18: Conservation of Energy. Work To do work on an object you need an application of a force AND movement due to the force. Example: Lifting a barbell. A force

Check Your UnderstandingCheck Your Understanding

If a ball with a mass of 2 kg is raised to a height of 10 m, what is the gravitational PE of the ball?

PEG = ?m = 2 kg

g = 10 m/s2

h = 10 m

PEG = mgh

PEG = (2 kg)(10 m/s2)(10 m) = 200 J

Page 19: Conservation of Energy. Work To do work on an object you need an application of a force AND movement due to the force. Example: Lifting a barbell. A force

Elastic Potential Energy

Elastic Potential Energy: the potential energy stored in an elastic object due to change in shape. Elastic PE exists in objects that can be

stretched and will return to their original shape SI Unit: Joule (J) Ex: rubber bands, springs

Page 20: Conservation of Energy. Work To do work on an object you need an application of a force AND movement due to the force. Example: Lifting a barbell. A force

Check Your UnderstandingCheck Your Understanding

Does a car hoisted for lubrication in a service Does a car hoisted for lubrication in a service station have elastic or gravitational PE?station have elastic or gravitational PE?

Gravitational

How much more work will raise the car twice as How much more work will raise the car twice as high?high?

Twice as much work

How much more potential energy will it have How much more potential energy will it have then?then?

Twice as much potential energy

Page 21: Conservation of Energy. Work To do work on an object you need an application of a force AND movement due to the force. Example: Lifting a barbell. A force

Check Your UnderstandingCheck Your Understanding

Which type of potential energy does a bow stretched to shoot an arrow have?

Both elastic and gravitational PE. It has elastic because it is stretched and has the potential to move back to its original position, and it has gravitational because it is at a height and has the potential to fall.

Page 22: Conservation of Energy. Work To do work on an object you need an application of a force AND movement due to the force. Example: Lifting a barbell. A force

Work and PE• The amount of PE an object has is equal to the

work done to raise the object a vertical distance.• The object has the potential to do work.• The same amount of work was done in the picture

below because all the balls are at the same vertical height. All the balls have the same PE

Page 23: Conservation of Energy. Work To do work on an object you need an application of a force AND movement due to the force. Example: Lifting a barbell. A force

Kinetic Energy

Kinetic energy:Kinetic energy: energy of an object in energy of an object in motionmotion An object MUST be moving to have KE An object with KE also has momentum SI Unit: Joule (J)

Equation: KE = ½mvKE = ½mv22

• KE = Kinetic energy (J)• m = mass (kg)• v = velocity (m/s)

Page 24: Conservation of Energy. Work To do work on an object you need an application of a force AND movement due to the force. Example: Lifting a barbell. A force

Check Your UnderstandingCheck Your Understanding

How much kinetic energy does a 1 kg cart have moving at 1 m/s?

KE = ?

m = 1 kg

v = 1 m/s

KE = ½mv2

KE = ½(1)(12) = ½ Joule

Page 25: Conservation of Energy. Work To do work on an object you need an application of a force AND movement due to the force. Example: Lifting a barbell. A force

KE, Mass & Velocity• KE is directly proportional to mass

2m = 2KE½m = ½KE

• KE is directly proportional to velocity squared

2v = 22KE = 4KE3v = 32KE = 9KE

4v = 42KE = 16KE

Page 26: Conservation of Energy. Work To do work on an object you need an application of a force AND movement due to the force. Example: Lifting a barbell. A force

Work and KE

• An object that is changing its KE is changing: Its mass Its velocity Both mass and velocity

• If an object is changing its velocity, it is accelerating, so a force is applied to it So there is work done on it A change in KE means work is done by the

object

Page 27: Conservation of Energy. Work To do work on an object you need an application of a force AND movement due to the force. Example: Lifting a barbell. A force

KE and Stopping Distance

• KE is equal to the amount of work required to increase the speed of a moving object or the work the object can do while being brought to rest.

• Consider a car that doubles its speed. 2v = 22KE = 4KE. If 4KE, then 4W. So an object moving TWICE as fast takes

FOUR times as much work to stop. If this car were to skid, it would travel FOUR times as far.

Page 28: Conservation of Energy. Work To do work on an object you need an application of a force AND movement due to the force. Example: Lifting a barbell. A force
Page 29: Conservation of Energy. Work To do work on an object you need an application of a force AND movement due to the force. Example: Lifting a barbell. A force

Check Your UnderstandingCheck Your Understanding

You are traveling behind a truck on the You are traveling behind a truck on the highway. Knowing that you need to highway. Knowing that you need to leave 100 ft when traveling at 30 mph to leave 100 ft when traveling at 30 mph to stop, you figure that you can leave 200 stop, you figure that you can leave 200 ft between you and the next car if you ft between you and the next car if you are going 60 mph…in case you need to are going 60 mph…in case you need to suddenly stop. The truck in front of suddenly stop. The truck in front of you suddenly stops to avoid an you suddenly stops to avoid an accident. You slam on the breaks to accident. You slam on the breaks to avoid hitting the truck, but you still avoid hitting the truck, but you still plow into it anyway. Why?plow into it anyway. Why?

Page 30: Conservation of Energy. Work To do work on an object you need an application of a force AND movement due to the force. Example: Lifting a barbell. A force

Because your speed had doubled, you had not just double the KE, but 4 times as much KE. Because of this, you actually needed not just double the stopping distance, but 4 times the stopping distance.

Page 31: Conservation of Energy. Work To do work on an object you need an application of a force AND movement due to the force. Example: Lifting a barbell. A force

Work-Energy Theorem

Work-energy theorem: whenever work is done, the energy of a system changes. If you change the PE, you are doing work If you change the KE, you are doing work Ex: An object that changes it KE is moving,

thus doing work. An object being lifted or stretched to gain PE is having work done on it.

Equations: W = ΔKE; W= -ΔPE

Page 32: Conservation of Energy. Work To do work on an object you need an application of a force AND movement due to the force. Example: Lifting a barbell. A force

• Remember, both work and energy are measured in Joules

• Movement must have taken place for a change in energy, and therefore work, to have taken place.

Page 33: Conservation of Energy. Work To do work on an object you need an application of a force AND movement due to the force. Example: Lifting a barbell. A force

Check Your UnderstandingCheck Your Understanding

Does a car slowing down on a rough surface have work being done on it?

Yes! The car is slowing down, so it is changing its KE. A change in KE results in work being done on the car by the road

Does a student sitting at the top of the stairs have work being done on them?

No! They are not moving so they are not changing their KE or PE, so no work is being done.

Page 34: Conservation of Energy. Work To do work on an object you need an application of a force AND movement due to the force. Example: Lifting a barbell. A force

The Law of Conservation of Energy

Law of Conservation of Energy:Law of Conservation of Energy: energy energy cannot be created or destroyed but can cannot be created or destroyed but can change formschange forms Energy changes from one form to another Ex: PE changes to KE at the bottom of a hill

Equation: ME = PE + KEME = PE + KE

MEME before before = ME = ME afterafter

(PE + KE)(PE + KE)beforebefore = (PE + KE) = (PE + KE)afterafter

Page 35: Conservation of Energy. Work To do work on an object you need an application of a force AND movement due to the force. Example: Lifting a barbell. A force
Page 36: Conservation of Energy. Work To do work on an object you need an application of a force AND movement due to the force. Example: Lifting a barbell. A force

• The total ME (mechanical energy) remains the same throughout a system. It’s just a matter of how much is KE and how

much is PE Ex: At the top of a pendulum swing, there are

50 J of PE; there is no KE b/c it is not moving. At the bottom of the swing, all the PE has converted to all KE. So the KE is 50 J and the PE is 0 J. In the middle of the swing, it would be 25 J of PE and 25 J of KE.

Page 37: Conservation of Energy. Work To do work on an object you need an application of a force AND movement due to the force. Example: Lifting a barbell. A force
Page 38: Conservation of Energy. Work To do work on an object you need an application of a force AND movement due to the force. Example: Lifting a barbell. A force

Check Your UnderstandingCheck Your Understanding

At the very top of a roller coaster, a girl At the very top of a roller coaster, a girl has a potential energy of 100 J. What has a potential energy of 100 J. What would be her kinetic energy at the very would be her kinetic energy at the very bottom of the hill (assuming there is no bottom of the hill (assuming there is no energy lost to air resistance)?energy lost to air resistance)?

100 J. Since energy is neither created nor destroyed, all the potential energy at the top of the roller coaster will be converted into all kinetic energy.

Page 39: Conservation of Energy. Work To do work on an object you need an application of a force AND movement due to the force. Example: Lifting a barbell. A force

What would the KE be if there was air What would the KE be if there was air resistance?resistance?

Then there would be less than 100 J because some energy would be lost to heat of friction (like when you rub your hands together).

Check Your UnderstandingCheck Your Understanding