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Published byMerry Wilkins Modified over 8 years ago
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1 PhysicsChapter 5 Work & Energy Sections:15-1 Work 5-2 Energy 5-3 Conservation of Energy 5-4 Work, Energy & Power
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2 Work A force that causes a displacement of an object does work on that object W= F x d W is work, F is force, d is distance Unit is a Newton-meter or Joule, J Work is done on an object only if the object moves due to the action of an applied force Consider the situations of a mom & child Work is done on an object only when components of the applied force are parallel to the displacement of the object If a force is applied at an angle , then only the vector component of the force parallel to the direction of displacement is the force that does the work on the object W = F x d (cos ) If = 0, then cos 0 = 1 & so W=Fd; if = 90, then cos 90 = 0 & W=0 If many constant forces act on an object, find the net work by finding the net force W net = F net (d) (cos )
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3 Equations W= F x d W = F x d (cos ) W net = F net (d) (cos )
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4 Work Work is a scalar Work is positive when direction of displacement is same as direction of applied force Ex: lift a box (applied force up, direction is up) Work is negative when direction of displacement is opposite that of applied force Ex: friction of box sliding on floor (applied force moves box forward, but friction does work on box in opposing direction)
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5 Kinetic Energy Kinetic energy – energy of an object due to its motion Depends on speed & mass of object KE = ½ mv 2 KE is a scalar, unit is Joule, J
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6 Potential Energy Potential energy – energy associated with an object’s position Gravitational potential energy – energy associated with an object due to its position relative to the Earth or some other gravity source PE g = mgh M = mass, g = 9.81m/s 2, h = height Unit is Joule, J FYI – electrical energy often measured in kW h, 1 kW h = 3.6 x 10 6 J
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7 Elastic Potential Energy Elastic potential energy – energy in a stretched or compressed elastic object Relaxed length – term for the length of a spring when no external forces acting on it; when a force compresses or lengthens a spring PE is stored in spring (work is done to spring!) The amount of PE depends on distance spring is compressed or stretched from relaxed length PE e = ½ kx 2 k = spring constant, x = distance compressed or stretched Spring constant = a parameter that expresses how resistant a spring is to being compressed or stretched, unit is N/m
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8 Mechanical Energy Mechanical energy – the sum of KE & all forms of PE ME = KE + PE Energy Mechanical Non-mechanical KineticPotential Gravitational Elastic
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9 Conservation of Energy ME i = ME f Initial mechanical energy = final mechanical energy Friction is absent ½ mv 2 i + mgh i = ½ mv 2 f + mgh f Above equation rewritten using KE & PE In presence of friction, ME is not conserved; b/c ME converted to nonmechanical energy Non-mechanical energy includes: electromagnetic energy, heat, light, nuclear energy, chemical energy
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10 Work, Energy, & Power Net work = change in KE W n = KE Work done by friction: W f = ME(W f is work due to friction) Power = W/ t If W = Fd, then P = W/ t = Fd/ t For work, remember there is a time interval involved, so work done is done in a unit of time.
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11 Power Since distance moved per unit time is speed then an alternative equation for power is: P = Fv Watt is unit for power; 1 W = 1J/s 1 horsepower = 746W Wattage of light bulbs Dim bulb ~40W Bright bulb ~500W Decorative light bulbs: indoor ~0.7W, outdoor ~7.0W What about CFBs?
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