Work Power Energy
Work Power Energy
Work Power Energy
Work, Power
and
Potential energy
Pre-reading: KJF §10.1 and 10.2
What is Energy?
Energy is needed to do useful work.
Energy can move things, heat things up, cool them
down, join things, break things, cut things, make
noise, make light, and power our electronics, etc.
Energy can be changed from one form to another.
KJF §10.1–10.2 2
kinetic energy
thermal energy
3
Energy
kinetic energy – energy of motion
K = ½ mv2
potential energy – stored energy
U = mgh (gravity)
KJF §10.5 4
Law of Conservation of Energy
Energy cannot be created or destroyed
(i.e. it is "conserved")
KJF §10.3 5
WORK
KJF §10.4
6
What is Work?
Work is the process of transferring energy from
the environment to a system, or from the system to
the environment, by the application of forces.
KJF §10.2 7
What is Work?
“Doing work” means using a force to
• transfer energy from one object to another, or
• convert energy from one form to another.
KJF §10.5 9
KJF §10.5 10
Work and Kinetic Energy (2)
Therefore" ∆K = ½ m × 2axd = maxd = Fx d
= F cosθ d
But our definition of work was “change in
energy” and in this case the only change is in
kinetic energy.
Therefore the work done is
W = ∆K = Fd cosθ
KJF §10.4 11
12
Forces that do no work
• If the object does not move, no work is done
KJF §10.2 13
KJF §10.2 14
Work-Energy Theorem
Work is a scalar, i.e. the work done by the individual
forces can be added together "arithmetically":
W = W1 + W2 + …
Work-Energy Theorem: (a special case of the law
of conservation of energy) The change in kinetic
energy of a system equals the sum of work done by
all the individual forces on the system:
∆K = ∑W
Strictly speaking this theorem applies to rigid ("non-squishy") objects
KJF §10.3 15
[0 J]
16
What is Power?
Power means the rate at which a force does work
on an object.
Instantaneous power:
KJF §10.10 17
Units
Units: watt (W) = joule.second–1 (J.s–1)
[1 horsepower (hp) = 746 W]
Power P W
18
Problem
The loaded cab of an elevator has a mass of
3.0 × 103 kg and moves 210m up the shaft in 23s
at constant speed.
At what average rate does the force from the cable
do work on the cab?
[2.7 × 105 W]
19
[58 kW]
20
Gravitational Potential Energy
Stored energy due to height in a gravitational field:
G.P.E. or U = mgh
where m is mass (kg) and h is height above the
origin level (m).
The origin position (h = 0) can be freely chosen
U is always relative to some reference level or position.
Example: A 1.0 kg mass is held 10 m above the ground.
Find its G.P.E. relative to the ground.
[U = 1.0 kg × 9.8 ms–2 × 10 m = 98 J]
KJF §10.6 21
KJF §10.6 22
Work done by weight (gravity) on the ball
as it falls a distance h towards earth is
W = Fs cos θ = mg × Δh × cos 0° = mgΔh
" i.e. work done by weight (gravity) Δh
= minus the change in U
23
PE is independent of path
Because gravitational potential energy depends only
on the height of the object above the reference level,
the potential energy does not
depend on the path taken.
In both cases the G.P.E increased
by the same amount: mgh
KJF §10.6 24
Conservative Forces