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Published byCordelia Anthony Modified over 6 years ago
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Energy and mass are equivalent C = 3 x 108 m/s.
Mass Energy E = mc2 Energy and mass are equivalent C = 3 x 108 m/s. A big number and its squared! So even if m is small, E is big. A small mass, converted to energy, gives a lot of energy!
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Example
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Electromagnetic energy
Light displays properties of both waves and particles. Light is an electromagnetic wave-a wave created by alternating electric and magnetic fields. “Light” is more than just visible light, it covers wavelengths from radio thru Gamma rays Light is also a “particle” called a photon. Photons have energy given by E=hν or E=hc/λ. H is constant, c is the speed of light , ν is the frequency of light and λ is the wavelength of the light.
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Conservation of Energy
The principle of conservation of energy states that energy cannot be created or destroyed. But it can be converted from one form to another This idea of energy transformation is at the heart of energy generation.
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Energy Sources renewable vs non-rewnewable
Renewable – can’t be exhausted Solar Geo-thermal Tidal Wind Hydro Non-renewable-can be exhausted Fossil fuels (oil, coal etc) uranium
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How much do we use? World energy consumption US energy consumption
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How much do we use?
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How much do we use? Almost 95% of the energy we use comes from non-renewble energy sources! One of these days we will run out, and then what? What are some short and long term answers to this question?
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Fossil fuels
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FOSSIL FUELS Carbon or hydrocarbons (a compound made of hydrogen and carbon) found in the earth’s crust Formed from the bacterial decay of plant and animal life in ancient (a few hundred million years ago) seas. The decomposing material was covered with mud and sediment This increased the pressure and temperature on the material and deprived it of oxygen. A variety of hydrocarbon molecules are created in solid, liquid and gas states. The gas and liquid could travel through the porous rock and collect in geological traps (rock features that prevent further movement of the hydrocarbons).
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Petroleum traps
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Why is there oil in Texas?
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A little history…. 1859 Colonel Drake first drilled for oil and found it in Titusville, PA. Previous to this, the only oil known were surface springs. Other wells were drilled and the oil was refined into kerosene. Oil was soon found in Ohio, Indiana, California and Texas.
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What about Kentucky or Tennessee?
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Oil in KY Well that didn’t really happen but there are oil fields in KY and TN! Largest in KY is Big Sinking, spanning Estille, Lee, Powell and Wolfe counties.
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Current KY oil reserves
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All good things must come to and end…..
It looks like there is a lot left, but it won’t last very long. It takes about 11 years from the time an oil reserve is discovered until the oil reaches production. Also, the production of any energy resource has to be economically feasible; it can’t take more energy to get the energy produced than the energy itself produces. Q∞ denotes the amount of a resource available for all time, until it is exhausted
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M.K. Hubbart: The Nostradomus of petroleum
Predicted Q∞ to be 165 X 109 barrels of oil for the US in 1956, (this did not include Alaska). Much smaller value than his contemporaries and he predicted that US oil production would peak between 1966 and 1971 and then fall off, independent of anything the oil industry did. Not a popular prediction, but it rang true, US oil production peaked in 1970.
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Hubbart Curve
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