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Published byGervase Bishop Modified over 9 years ago
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Work, Power and Energy Chp 10 and 11
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Some Terms Work Exerting a force over a distance Energy The ability to do work (or change the world around you) Kinetic energy Energy due to motion Potential energy Energy due to position or composition Work-energy theorem work is required to change KE Power The rate at which work is done
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Work Must be exerted over a distance If nothing moves, no work was done on THAT object (could still be done on you) Need to use the net force to calculate work All the vector addition rules still apply SI unit is Joule (J) Work is a vector, since force and displacement are vectors Can be negative, which means the work is being done by the object rather than on it
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Power If the same amount of work is done more quickly, then more power is exerted Its harder to do a job quickly than it is to do the same job more slowly SI unit is Watts (W) Often we use kilowatts since watts are such a small unit
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Simple Machines A device that makes work easier, either by changing the distance or direction that a force is exerted It doesn’t make the work less If you increase the distance a force is exerted, than less force is needed to do the same amount of work The machine imparts no energy of its own
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6 Types of Simple Machines Inclined plane Ex. ramp Lever Ex. crowbar Wheel and axel Ex. tire Pulley Ex. Well bucket Wedge Ex. ax Screw Ex. Wood screw
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Calculating the Benefits of Machines Mechanical advantage Compares effort and resistance forces Ideal mechanical advantage Compares effort and resistance distances Efficiency Compares how much of the input work gets translated to output work Often work is lost to heat due to friction
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Compound Machines Result from a combination of 2 or more simple machines The resistance force of one machine becomes the effort force of another Like dominoes However, the efficiency is less because friction increases with each additional machine
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Conservation of Energy Energy can change forms and be passed between objects, but it cannot be created or destroyed Forms of energy: Kinetic Elastic potential energy Thermal energy Gravitational potential energy
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Collisions 2 types: Elastic KE is conserved in the collision Occurs between hard objects Inelastic KE is lost in the collision due to deformation, heat and sound Occurs between soft or sticky objects Energy is still conserved, its just not all kept at KE
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