1 / 17

Unit III Energy

Unit III Energy. Physical Science Forms of Energy. Energy is the ability to do work. Measured in Joules (J) just like work All matter has energy. General Forms of Energy. 1. Kinetic Energy : KE = ½ m v 2. The energy of motion. Anything that is moving has kinetic energy.

Download Presentation

Unit III Energy

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. Unit III Energy Physical Science Forms of Energy

  2. Energy is the ability to do work • Measured in Joules (J) just like work • All matter has energy

  3. General Forms of Energy 1.Kinetic Energy: KE = ½ m v2 The energy of motion. Anything that is moving has kinetic energy. Do these people have KE?

  4. Potential Energy: PE = mgh Energy that is stored or is not being used yet Do these things have PE?

  5. How to change KE • Change the mass or velocity of an object • If velocity is doubled, KE is quadrupled

  6. Types of PE Gravitational PE: depends on how high off the ground an object is. * the greater the height and mass the object has the more Gravitational PE it has Elastic PE: the ability of an object to rebound to its original shape or size (we don’t have to calculate this one)

  7. Types of Energy • Mechanical: Energy of everyday objects (anything with mass and volume)

  8. 2. Chemical Energy: energy that is stored in chemical bonds

  9. Electromagnetic Energy: energy that is related to charge and magnetic poles

  10. Thermal Energy: energy that is based on the internal motion of particles in an object (Heat and temperature)

  11. 5. Nuclear Energy: energy that is contained in the nucleus. Released when strong and weak nuclear forces are overcome

  12. Energy Conversion • When energy is transferred between one type and another. Example: burning gasoline transfers chemical potential into thermal energy

  13. Energy Conversion • In a perfect situation, the total energy in a conversion is conserved. • Total Energy is all of the PE and KE of a situation added together. • KE1 + PE1 = KE2 + PE2

  14. KE and Friction • Friction slows an object down therefore it reduces the amount of kinetic energy • Increases the amount of Thermal Energy

  15. Practice Problem 1. A 0.15 kg ball is thrown into the air and rises to a height of 20.0 m. How much kinetic energy did the ball have initially?

  16. 2. A 1.25 kg steel ball with a kinetic energy of 0.25 J rolls along a horizontal track. How high up an inclined track will the ball roll if friction can be ignored?

  17. Renewable: forms of energy that can reproduce fast enough with use Nonrenewable: energy that cannot reproduce itself Renewable vs. Non Renewable

More Related