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Announcements Reading Week 10: Gregory, Chapters 15; 16, pp. 326-331, 339-end; and Chapter 20, pp. 419-25. Conservation of Mechanical Energy Conservation.

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Presentation on theme: "Announcements Reading Week 10: Gregory, Chapters 15; 16, pp. 326-331, 339-end; and Chapter 20, pp. 419-25. Conservation of Mechanical Energy Conservation."— Presentation transcript:

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2 Announcements Reading Week 10: Gregory, Chapters 15; 16, pp. 326-331, 339-end; and Chapter 20, pp. 419-25. Conservation of Mechanical Energy Conservation of Mechanical Energy HW7 due 3 November Midterm mean was 85 Grades posted on canvas later today Midterm solutions and essay grading remarks posted on Tests page.Tests page Acceleration problem

3 Last time 18 th cent. vis viva controversy: does the universe run down? Descartes: universe consists of many parts colliding with each other, but in each collision God ensures that “no motion is lost” His guess for what physical quantity stayed the same in a collision: “force of motion” mv vv Inelastic collision: before after mm 2m +mv – mv = 0 2m(0) = 0 [today: mv=momentum] Huygens: yes, but remember to include the sign of v!

4 Last time Leibniz: doesn’t like Cartesian proposal, since inelastic collisions will still run universe down. Proposed instead vis viva, mv 2 Vis viva survives inelastic collisions, since clay particles move afterwards (clay heats up) ‘sGravesande corrected to ½ mv 2 [today: ½ mv 2 =kinetic energy]

5 Clicker question Which of the following was a challenge to his 1/r 2 law of gravitation that Newton survived in the 18 th century? shape of the Earth: prolate or oblate date of return of Halley’s comet influence of sun on moon’s motion slowing down of moon’s orbit all the above

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7 Flammarion engraving 1888

8 The infinite universe that Laplace showed was stable and eternal We may regard the present state of the universe as the effect of its past and the cause of its future. An intellect which at a certain moment would know all forces that set nature in motion, and all positions of all items of which nature is composed, if this intellect were also vast enough to submit these data to analysis, it would embrace in a single formula the movements of the greatest bodies of the universe and those of the tiniest atom; for such an intellect nothing would be uncertain and the future just like the past would be present before its eyes. — Pierre Simon Laplace, A Philosophical Essay on Probabilities

9 It was a mechanical clockwork universe that had and would continue to tick along As Halley had shown in the problem sof the shrinking of the Moon’s orbit and the prediction of his comet’s reappearance, you could run the Newtonian mechanism of the heaven backwards as well as forwards Newtonian celestial mechanics was, in other words, reversible

10 This week we’re going to give you the facts of life

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12 We’ll replace Laplace’s well-ordered, stable, eternal clockwork universe with one that ends with a whimper This is because there are irreversible processes at work

13 “This is the End” From Camille Flammarion (1842 -1925)

14 Goals for today 1. To lay the groundwork for the undoing of Laplace’s universe 2.To do that we have to look at some of the other forces of nature than just the contact forces we have been considering ElectricalMagneticChemicalOpticalThermal 3. To see some examples of how these “forces” were interconvertible 4. To begin to see how there was something special about heat

15 Descartes’ cosmos underscored the central importance of matter in motion It was “the name of the game” Natural philosophers wanted to learn all they could about how matter comes to be in motion

16 Descartes was concerned with contact motive forces – collisions of masses already moving

17 In the wake of debates about vis viva, natural philosophers became interested in other forces that were a counterpart to “living forces” These “dead” forces were exerted on matter but did not result in the motion of matter unless they were converted into motive force As they investigated these forces they discovered that there were numerous ways in which they were interconvertible What were these forces?

18 Electrical force

19 Magnetic force

20 Chemical force Thermal force

21 Optical force

22 What was electricity? Franklin thought of it as a weightless fluid that repelled itself but was attracted to normal matter

23 Invention of the Leyden Jar

24 Lucia Galeazzi

25 Force conversions ??

26 Force conversion??

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29 Dissociated water into two gases using current from a battery, 1800 William Wollaston

30 Herschel experimented on the temperature of colored light Noticed that region below red was hottest of all Force conversion ??

31 Ritter experimented with darkening of the muriate of silver (AgCl) by colored light Prevented darkeningDarkenedNo effect Darkened most of all Force conversion ??

32 Heat The transformation of heat into motive force was a major factor of the Industrial Revolution

33 Newcomen steam engine Sadi Carnot

34 Carnot noted that to use heat to produce mechanical force required that something at a higher temperature fell to a lower temperature. Without a temperature difference the heat was “useless” He also thought that heat was conserved

35 Carnot imagined that heat was merely used to create the motion of the piston like water is used in a water wheel (so the water is not used up but can be used again) Others said Carnot was wrong -the heat actually turned into mechanical force

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37 James Joule In England James Joule determined experimentally how much heat corresponded to how much mechanical force, settling the question of whether heat was conserved or not (it was not)

38 In Germany Rudolf Clausius said Joule and Carnot were both right Carnot was right that the temperature must fall for heat to become mechanical force Joule was right that heat became mechanical force (heat not conserved) Because of this not all of the heat became mechanical force. There was always some that was merely transferred from a warm body to a colder one.


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