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Ch. 11 Energy I: Work and kinetic energy

This article explores the concept of work and energy in physics, discussing the definition and calculation of work, power, kinetic energy, and the work-energy theorem. Examples and explanations are provided to help understand the relationship between work and energy.

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Ch. 11 Energy I: Work and kinetic energy

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  1. Ch. 11 Energy I:Work and kinetic energy

  2. 11-1 Work and energy Example: If a person pulls an object uphill. After some time, he becomes tired and stops. We can analyze the forces exerted in this problem based on Newton’s Laws, but those laws can not explain: why the man’s ability to exert a force to move forward becomes used up. For this analysis, we must introduce the new concepts of “Work and Energy”.

  3. Notes: 1) The “physics concept of work” is different from the “work in daily life”; 2) The “energy” of a system is a measure of its capacity to do work.

  4. 11-2 Work done by a constant force 11-3 Power • Definition of ‘Work’ The work W done by a constant force that moves a body through a displacement in the directions of the force as the product of the magnitudes of the force and the displacement: (11-1) (Here )

  5. Example: In Fig11-5, a block is sliding down a plane. The normal force does zero work; the friction force does negative work, the gravitational force does positive work which is or s v h Fig 11-5

  6. s v h 2. Work as a dot product The work done by a force can be written as (11-2) (1) If , the work done by the is zero. (2) Unlike mass and volume, work is not an intrinsic property of a body. It is related to the external force. (3) Unit of work: Newton-meter (Joule) (4) The value of the work depends on the inertial reference frame of the observer.

  7. 3. Definition of power: The rate at which work is done. If a certain force performs work on a body in a time , the average power due to the force is (11-7) The instantaneous powerP is (11-8) If the power is constant in time, then .

  8. If the body moves a displacement in a time dt, (11-10) Unit of power: joule/second (Watt) See 动画库/力学夹/2-03变力的功A.exe 1

  9. 1.One-dimensional situation The smooth curve in Fig 11-12 shows an arbitrary force F(x) that acts on a body that moves from to . Fig 11-12 11-4 Work done by a variable force 11-5 F x

  10. We divide the total displacement into a number N of small intervals of equal width . This interval so small that the F(x) is approximately constant. Then in the interval to +dx , the work and similar ……The total work is or (11-12)

  11. Numerically, this quantity is exactly equal to the area between the force curve and the x axis between limits and . To make a better approximation, we let go to zero and the number of intervals N go to infinity. Hence the exact result is or (11-13) (11-14)

  12. Example: Work done by the spring force In Fig 11-13, the spring is in the relaxed state, that is no force applied, and the body is located at x =0. Only depend on initial and final positions Fig 11-13 Relaxed length o x

  13. 2.Two-dimensional situation Fig 11-16 shows a particle moves along a curve from to f. The element of work The total work done is (11-19) y f o x or (11-20) Fig 11-16

  14. Sample problem 11-5 A small object of massm is suspended from a string of length L. The object is pulled sideways by a force that is always horizontal, until the string finally makes an angle with the vertical. The displacement is accomplished at a small constant speed. Find the work done by all the forces that act on the object. Fig 11-17 y x ds T m mg

  15. 11-6 Kinetic energy and work-energy theorem Relationship between Work and Energy 2. The work-energy theorem: 1. Definition of kinetic energy K: for a body of mass m moving with speed v. (11-24) “The net work done by the forces acting on a body is equal to the change in the kinetic energy of the body.”

  16. 3. General proof of the work-energy theorem For 1 D case: represents the net force acting on the body. The work done by is It is also true for the case in two or three dimensional cases

  17. Please relate a) point to conservation of momentum 4.Notes of work-energy theorem: a). In different inertial reference frames? The work-energy theorem survives in different inertial reference frames. But the values of the work and kinetic energy in their respective reference frames may be different. b). Limitation of the theorem It applies only to single mass points.

  18. 1.Work in rotation Fig11-19 shows an arbitrary rigid body to which an external agent applies a force at point p, a distance r from the rotational axis. Fig 11-19 11-7 Work and kinetic energy in rotational motion y ds P r O x

  19. As the body rotates through a small angle about the axis, point p moves through a distance . The component of the force in the direction of motion of p is ,and so the work dw done by the force is

  20. So for a rotation from angle to angle, the work in the rotation is (11-25) The instantaneous power expended in rotation motion is (11-27)

  21. 2. Rotational kinetic energy Fig 11-20 shows a rigid body rotating about a fixed axis with angular speed . We can consider the body as a collection of N particles , …… moving with tangential speed , …… If indicates the distance of particle from the axis, then and its kinetic energy is . The total kinetic energy of the entire rotating body is Fig 11-20 y ω O x

  22. is the rotational inertia of the body, then (11-28) (11-29) 3. The rotational form of the work-energy theorem which can be obtained similarly as for single particles.

  23. Table 11-1

  24. Sample problem 11-10 A space probe coasting (航线) in a region of negligible gravity is rotating with an angular speed of 2.4rev/s about an axis that points in its direction of motion. The spacecraft is in the form of a thin spherical shell of radius 1.7m and mass 245kg. It is necessary to reduce the rotational speed to 1.8rev/s by firing tangential thrusters (推进器) along the equator of the probe. What constant force must the thruster exert if the change of angular speed is to be accomplished as the probe rotates through 3.0 revolution?

  25. Solution: For a thin spherical shell The change in rotational kinetic energy is The rotational work is then Z in –z direction

  26. 11-8 Kinetic energy in collision We reconsider a collision between two bodies that move along the x axis with the analysis of kinetic energy. 1. Elastic collision: the total kinetic energy before collision equals the total kinetic energy after the collision. (11-30)

  27. Final Fig (6-17) Two-body collisions in cm frame 1. initial 2. elastic 3. inelastic Completely inelastic 4. explosive 5.

  28. 2. Inelastic collision: the total final kinetic energy is less than the total initial kinetic energy. (If you drop a tennis ball on a hard surface, it does not quite bounce to its original height.) 3. Completely inelastic collision: two bodies stick together. This type of collision loses the maximum amount of kinetic energy, consistent with the conservation of momentum. 4. Explosive or energy releasing collision: “The total final kinetic energy is greater than the total initial kinetic energy.” Often occur in nuclear reactions.

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