1 / 32

Energy Work Power

Energy Work Power. Textbook Chp 6 pg 103-122. What is Energy?. Energy is the ability to do work Unit: Joules (J). 5 forms of Energy. 3 types of Potential Energy Elastic Potential Energy Chemical Potential Energy Gravitational Potential Energy Kinetic Energy Thermal Energy

makoto
Download Presentation

Energy Work Power

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Energy Work Power Textbook Chp 6 pg 103-122

  2. What is Energy? • Energy is the ability to do work • Unit: Joules (J)

  3. 5 forms of Energy • 3 types of Potential Energy • Elastic Potential Energy • Chemical Potential Energy • Gravitational Potential Energy • Kinetic Energy • Thermal Energy • [All have unit of Joules!]

  4. Potential Energy • Potential Energy refers to energy which is storedto do work later • the energy is not doing anything now, but has the potential to do something later • There are 3 types of potential energy in your syllabus: elastic, potential and chemical

  5. Elastic Potential Energy • Elastic Potential Energy is the energy stored when an elastic object is stretched or squeezed. • E.g. a stretched rubber band

  6. Chemical Potential Energy • Chemical potential energy is the stored energy which can only be released by chemical reactions • E.g. battery, food

  7. Gravitational Potential Energy (GPE) • GPE is the energy stored due to the height of the object

  8. Kinetic Energy (KE) • KE refers to the energy of moving objects

  9. Thermal Energy • Thermal energy is energy due to heat. • Hot objects have high thermal energy • Thermal energy is also created when a moving object is opposed by friction

  10. 5 forms of Energy • 3 types of Potential Energy • Elastic Potential Energy • Chemical Potential Energy • Gravitational Potential Energy • Kinetic Energy • Thermal Energy

  11. Principle of Conservation of Energy (CoE) • Energy cannot be created or destroyed, but can be converted from one form to another • The total energy of an isolated system is constant

  12. Conversion of Energy • Since CoE states that energy cannot be created or destroyed, • when one kind of type is lost, it must be converted to another type of energy • E.g. if Energy A is being converted to Energy B, we say the Loss in Energy A = Gain in Energy B

  13. Example 1 • An object falling from a tall height, ignore air resistance • Gravitation Potential Energy (GPE) is lost • Kinetic Energy (KE) is gained • loss in GPE = gain in KE

  14. Example 2 • An object sliding across a flat rough surface • Object becomes slower – KE is lost • Where is the energy converted to? • Motion against Friction always results in gain in Thermal Energy • Loss in KE = Gain in Thermal Energy

  15. Example 3 • Stretched rubber band is released • Stretched rubber band has elastic potential energy • After it is released, elastic potential energy is lost • It starts to move = kinetic energy is gained • Loss in Elastic PE = Gain in KE

  16. Example 4 • An electric toy car running on batteries • Toy Car starts to move when switched on • gain in KE • Batteries lose energy over time • loss in Chemical PE • Loss in Chemical PE = Gain in KE

  17. Skate Park Demo

  18. KE and GPE • KE = ½ mv2 • m = mass of object • v = velocity of object • GPE = mgh • m = mass of object • g = gravitational field strength, 10 ms-2 • h= height above the ground

  19. Common Mistake!! • For energy equations, the right side of the equation MUST be in SI Units • E.g. for GPE = mgh • Units of m must be in kg (not g) • Units of h must be in m (not cm)

  20. Example 5a • An object of mass 5 kg is dropped from rest. Determine its loss in gravitational potential energy after it has fallen 10m. Ignore air resistance. • Loss in GPE = mgh • = (5)(10)(10) • = 500 J (3 sf)

  21. Example 5b • What is the KE gained by the object after it has fallen for 10 m? • Loss in GPE = Gain in KE • Loss in GPE = 500 J • Gain in KE = 500 J

  22. Example 5c • What is the velocity of the object after it has fallen for 10 m? • KE = 500J • ½ mv2 = 500 • (0.5)(5)v2 = 500 • v2 = 200 • v = 14.1 ms-1 (3 sf)

  23. Work Done • In Physics, work done is to describe when a force has moved an object • Equation: • Work Done = Force x Distance • Distance must be same directionas Force • SI Units for Work Done is Joules (J)

  24. Example 6 • A force of 5N pushes an object a distance of 10 m. Determine the work done on the object by the force. • Work Done = Force x Distance • = (5)(10) • = 50.0 J (3 sf) F 10 m

  25. Example 7a • Lionel exerts 20 N of force holding a stack of books on his hands. He walks forward for 5 m. What is his work done? • Ans: zero. force is not in same direction as the distance moved

  26. Example 7b • Still holding the books, Lionel walks up a flight of stairs to a height of 4 m. What is his work done? • Is distance same direction as force? Yes • Work Done = Force x Distance • = (20)(4) = 80.0 J (3 sf)

  27. Power • A person/machine is said to be powerful when he can do a lot of work in very little time • If Zhiyu can study 3 chapters of Physics in 1 hour but Andre can study 4 chapters of Physics in 1 hour, who is the more powerful Physics mugger? • If Zhiyu studied for 2 hours and Andre studied for 1 hour, who did more work?

  28. Power • There are two possible equations for Power: • Power = Work Done / time • Power = Energy Spent / time • Units of Power: Watts (W)

  29. Example 8 • A force of 5N pushes an object a distance of 10 m for a time of 5 s. Determine the power created by the force. • Work Done = Force x Distance = (5)(10) = 50 J • Power = Work Done / Time • = 50/5 = 10.0 W (3 sf)

  30. Example 9 • An electric heater used 3600 J of energy in 30 s. What is the power of the heater? • Power = Energy spent / time • = 3600/30 • = 120 W

  31. Recap • 5 types of Energy • Principle of Conservation of Energy • Conversion of Energy • GPE = mgh • KE = ½ mv2 • Work Done = Force x Distance • 2 Eqns for Power

  32. Quiz!!

More Related