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Work, Energy, Power, and Machines

Work, Energy, Power, and Machines. Energy. Energy: the currency of the universe . Just like money, it comes in many forms! Everything that is accomplished has to be “paid for” with some form of energy.

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Work, Energy, Power, and Machines

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  1. Work, Energy, Power, and Machines

  2. Energy Energy: the currency of the universe. Just like money, it comes in many forms! Everything that is accomplished has to be “paid for” with some form of energy. Energy can’t be created or destroyed, but it can be transformed from one kind into another and it can be transferred from one object to another.

  3. Doing WORK is one way to transfer energy from one object to another. Work = Force x displacement W = Fd • Unit for work is Newton x meter. One Newton-meter is also called a Joule, J.

  4. Work = Force x displacement • Work is not done unless there is a displacement. • If you hold an object a long time, you may get tired, but NO work was done. • If you push against a solid wall for hours, there is still NO work done.

  5. Energy and Work have no direction associated with them and are therefore scalar quantities, not vectors. YEAH!!

  6. For work to be done, the displacement of the object must be along the same direction as the applied force. They must be parallel. • If the force and the displacement are perpendicular to each other, NO work is done by the force.

  7. For example, in lifting a book, the force exerted by your hands is upward and the displacement is upward- work is done. • Similarly, in lowering a book, the force exerted by your hands is still upward, and the displacement is downward. • The force and the displacement are STILL parallel, so work is still done. • But since they are in opposite directions, now it is NEGATIVE work.

  8. On the other hand, while carrying a book down the hallway, the force from your hands is vertical, and the displacement of the book is horizontal. • Therefore, NO work is done by your hands. • Since the book is obviously moving, what force IS doing work??? The static friction force between your hands and the book is acting parallel to the displacement and IS doing work!

  9. Work = Force x distance

  10. Your Force • So,….while climbing stairs or walking up an incline, only the vertical component of the displacement is used to calculate the work done in moving the object from the bottom to the top. Vertical component of d Horizontal component of d

  11. Example How much work is done to carry a 5 kg cat to the top of a ramp that is 7 meters long and 3 meters tall? W = Force x displacement Force = weight of the cat Which is parallel to the weight- the length of the ramp or the height? d = height NOT length W = mg x h W = 5 x 10 x 3 W = 150 J 7 m 3 m

  12. How much work do you do to carry a 30 kg cat from one side of the room to the other if the room is 10 meters long? ZERO, because your Force is vertical, but the displacement is horizontal.

  13. Power is the rate at which work is done- how fast you do work. Power = work / time P = W / t • You may be able to do a lot of work, but if it takes you a long time, you are not very powerful. • The faster you can do work, the more powerful you are.

  14. The unit for power is Joule / seconds which is also called a Watt, W (just like the rating for light bulbs) In the US, we usually measure power developed in motors in “horsepower” 1 hp = 746 W

  15. Example A power lifter picks up a 80 kg barbell above his head a distance of 2 meters in 0.5 seconds. How powerful was he? P = W / t W = Fd W = mg x h W = 80 x 10 x 2 = 1600 J P = 1600 / 0.5 P = 3200 W

  16. Kinds of Energy

  17. Kinetic Energy the energy of motion K = ½ mv2

  18. Potential Energy Stored energy It is called potential energy because it has the potential to do work.

  19. Example 1: Spring potential energy in the stretched string of a bow or spring or rubber band. SPE = ½ kx2 • Example 2: Chemical potential energy in fuels- gasoline, propane, batteries, food! • Example 3: Gravitational potential energy- stored in an object due to its position from a chosen reference point.

  20. Gravitational potential energy GPE = weight x height GPE = mgh Since you can measure height from more than one reference point, it is important to specify the location from which you are measuring.

  21. The GPE may benegative. For example, if your reference point is the top of a cliff and the object is at its base, its “height” would be negative, so mgh would also be negative. • The GPE only depends on the weight and the height, not on the path that it took to get to that height.

  22. Work and Energy Often, some force must do work to give an object potential or kinetic energy. You push a wagon and it starts moving. You do work to stretch a spring and you transform your work energy into spring potential energy. Or, you lift an object to a certain height- you transfer your energy into the object in the form of gravitational potential energy. Work = Force x distance = change in energy

  23. Example of Work = change in energy How much more distance is required to stop if a car is going twice as fast (all other things remaining the same)? Fd = D½ mv2 The work done by the forces acting = the change in the kinetic energy With TWICE the speed, the car has FOUR times the kinetic energy. Therefore it takes FOUR times the stopping distance. (What FORCE is doing the work??)

  24. The Work-Kinetic Energy Theorem NET Work done = D Kinetic Energy Wnet = ½ mv2f – ½ mv2o

  25. Example A 500kg car moving at 15m/s skids 20m to a stop. How much kinetic energy did the car lose? DK = ½ mvf2 – ½ mvo2 DK = -½ (500)152 DK = -56250J What force was applied to stop the car? F·d = DK F = DK / d F = -56250 / 20 F = -2812.5N

  26. Example A 500kg car moving at 15m/s slows to 10m/s. How much kinetic energy did the car lose? DK = ½ mvf2 – ½ mvo2 DK = ½ (500)102 - ½ (500)152 DK = -31250J What force was applied to stop the car if the distance moved was 12m? F·d = DK F = DK / d F = -31250 / 12 F = -2604N

  27. Example A 500kg car moving on a flat road at 15m/s skids to a stop. How much kinetic energy did the car lose? DK = ½ mvf2 – ½ mvo2 DK = -½ (500)152 DK = -56250J How far did the car skid if the effective coefficient of friction was 0.6? Stopping force = friction = mN = mmg F·d = DK (mmg)·d = DK d = DK / mmg d = 56250 / (0.6 · 500 · 10) = 18.75m

  28. Force, N Position, m Graphs • If you graph the applied force vs. the position, you can find how much work was done by the force. Work = Fd = “area under the curve”. Total Work = 2N x 2m + 3N x 4m = 16 J Area UNDER the x-axis is NEGATIVE work = - 1N x 2m F Net work = 16J – 2J = 14J d

  29. The Spring Force If you hang an object from a spring, the gravitational force pulls down on the object and the spring force pulls up.

  30. The Spring Force The spring force is given by Fspring = kx Where x is the amount that the spring stretched and k is the “spring constant” which describes how stiff the spring is

  31. The Spring Force If the mass is hanging at rest, then Fspring = mg Or kx = mg (this is called “Hooke’s Law) The easiest way to determine the spring constant k is to hang a known mass from the spring and measure how far the spring stretches! k = mg / x

  32. Graphing the Spring Force Suppose a certain spring had a spring constant k = 30 N/m. Graphing spring force vs. displacement: On horizontal axis- the displacement of the spring: x On vertical axis- the spring force = kx = 30x What would the graph look like? Fs = kx In “function” language: f(x) = 30x

  33. x2 x1 Spring Force vs. Displacement Fs = 30x Fs How could you use the graph To determine the work done by The spring from some x1 to x2? Take the AREA under the curve! x

  34. I love mrs. BRown

  35. Mechanical Energy Mechanical Energy = Kinetic Energy + Potential Energy E = ½ mv2 + mgh

  36. “Conservative” forces - mechanical energy is conserved if these are the only forces acting on an object. The two main conservative forces are: Gravity, spring forces “Non-conservative” forces - mechanical energy is NOT conserved if these forces are acting on an object. Forces like kinetic friction, air resistance

  37. Conservation of Mechanical Energy If there is no kinetic friction or air resistance, then the total energy of an object remains the same. If the object loses kinetic energy, it gains potential energy. If it loses potential energy, it gains kinetic energy. For example: tossing a ball upward

  38. Conservation of Mechanical Energy The ball starts with kinetic energy… Which changes to potential energy…. Which changes back to kinetic energy PE = mgh What about the energy when it is not at the top or bottom? E = ½ mv2 + mgh Energybottom = Energytop ½ mvb2 = mght K = ½ mv2 K = ½ mv2

  39. Examples • dropping an object • box sliding down an incline • tossing a ball upwards • a pendulum swinging back and forth • A block attached to a spring oscillating back and forth

  40. If there is kinetic friction or air resistance, energy will not be conserved. Energy will be lost in the form of heat. The DIFFERENCE between the original energy and the final energy is the amount of energy lost due to heat. Original energy – final energy = heat loss

  41. Sometimes, mechanical energy is actually INCREASED! For example: A bomb sitting on the floor explodes. Initially: ½ mv2 = 0 mgh = 0 ½ kx2 = 0 E = 0 After the explosion, there’s lots of kinetic and gravitational potential energy!! Did we break the laws of the universe and create energy??? Of course not! NO ONE, NO ONE, NO ONE can break the laws! The mechanical energy that now appears came from the chemical potential energy stored within the bomb itself!

  42. According to the Law of Conservation of Energy, energy cannot be created or destroyed. The total amount of mechanical energy in a system remains constant when there are no NONCONSERVATIVE forces doing work, but one form of energy may be transformed into another as conditions change. Eoriginal = Efinal

  43. Simple Machines and Efficiency Machine: A device that HELPS do work. A machine cannot produce more WORK ENERGY than the energy you put into it, but it can make your work easier to do.

  44. Some common “simple machines” include levers, pulleys, wheels and axles, and inclined planes • Ideally, with no friction, the work energy you get out of a machine equals the work energy you put into it. Ideally: Work in = work out

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