1 / 23

Potential and Kinetic Energy

Potential and Kinetic Energy. Energy: is the ability to do work Work is being done whenever some physical force is being used to move an object some distance. Energy means that birds can fly, tigers can roar, wind can blow, sun can shine, cars can go fast,

kayo
Télécharger la présentation

Potential and Kinetic 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. Potential and Kinetic Energy • Energy: is the ability to do work • Work is being done whenever some physical force is being used to move an object some distance

  2. Energy means that • birds can fly, • tigers can roar, • wind can blow, • sun can shine, • cars can go fast, • factories can make things, • light bulbs can glow and • your computer can work. Without energy, there would be nothing: no life, no movement, no light, … nothing

  3. Energy • All objects contain energy in one form or another • Can take the form of • Motion -Sound • Position - Electricity • Heat • Light • It can never be destroyed • It can only be converted from one form to another

  4. Kinetic Energy= the energy an object possesses because of its motion • The amount of Kinetic energy is dependent on the mass of the object in motion and it’s velocity.

  5. Objects "tend to keep on doing what they're doing" • In fact, it is the natural tendency of objects to resist changes in their state of motion. • Without some outside influence, an object in motion will remain in motion and an object at rest will remain at rest.

  6. Cardboard and a Coin placed on an Empty Tumbler Flick the cardboard with the finger. What do you observe? The coin drops into the tumbler. When we flick the cardboard the cardboard moves fast whereas the coin continues in its state of rest and hence drops into the tumbler. This tendency to resist changes in their state of motion is described as inertia Cardboard and a coin placed on an empty glass Flick the cardboard with the finger. What do you observe? The coin drops into the tumbler. When we flick the cardboard the cardboard moves fast whereas the coin continues in its state of rest and hence drops into the glass. So it is clear that objects continue to remain in their state of rest or of uniform motion until an external force is applied.

  7. Potential Energy • The energy of position • The amount of energy contained in an object at rest

  8. Potential or Kinetic Energy? • Moving car • Tree branch • Bent car fender • Balloon filled with air • Balloon squirting around room • Person inside a moving car

  9. What type of energy does the space shuttle have at lift off?

  10. The water at the top has potential energy • When water falls to a lower level, the potential energy is converted to kinetic energy.

  11. Velocity & Acceleration Some Review

  12. Defining Velocity Kinetic energy was • KE=1/2 (mass) (velocity)2 • Describes both the rate and direction of the motion • If an object speeds up or slows down in the given direction we say there is a change in velocity

  13. VELOCITY AND SPEED Velocity is a measure of how fast an object is traveling in a certain direction. • Example: A bus traveling 15 m/s increases its speed to 20 m/s • The speed changed so the velocity changed • The bus changes direction and goes east. Since the direction changed, so did the velocity

  14. Car on a circular track = may have constant speed, but cannot maintain a constant velocity as it’s direction is always changing.

  15. VELOCITY AND SPEED • Speed is a measure of how fast something is moving, but there is not a directional element to it • Is the distance on object moves per time or how fast something is moving without direction • Speed = Distance ÷ Time (S=D ÷ T) • If speed changes, so does the velocity

  16. VELOCITY Velocity = distance ÷ time The units we use are m/s and d is distance.

  17. ACCELERATION • Acceleration is the change in velocity per unit of time. • An example of this is when you travel in your car. • Your velocity is not constant throughout the entire trip as you slow down and speed up as necessary. • A positive acceleration means that you are speeding up and a negative acceleration means that you are slowing down.

  18. ACCELERATION • Acceleration has the formula: Acceleration = (Final Velocity) – (initial velocity) (Final time) – (Initial time) OR (time it takes to change velocity) A = vf – vi = ∆v ∆ means “change in” tf – ti ∆t Acceleration has the units of (distance unit)/(time unit) Ex: m/s2 or mi/h2

  19. ACCELERATION • Example acceleration problems • Calculate the acceleration of an object with: • Initial Velocity : 0.0m/s • Final Velocity: 14m/s • Time 4.0s • A = 14m/s – 0.0m/s 4.0s A = 3.5m/s2

  20. ACCELERATION • A car stops from a velocity of 55m/s in 15 seconds. What is the cars acceleration? Is the car speeding up or slowing down? • A = 0 – 55m/s-55m/s 15 s 15s A = -3.7m/s2 Car is slowing down

More Related