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Unit 2 Energy and Motion • Chapter 3 ~ Energy o Section 1 ~ What is Energy? o Section 2 ~ Heat, Temperature, and Thermal Energy o Section 3 ~ The Transfer of Thermal Energy Unit 2 covers the following framework standards: PS 13 and 14. Content was adapted the following: McLaughlin, C. W., & Thompson, M. (1999). Physical science. Columbus, Ohio/USA: Glencoe/McGraw-Hill. 16 Chapter 3: Energy Section 3.1 What is Energy? Terms: • Energy • Kinetic Energy • Potential Energy • Work • Mechanical Energy • Law of Conservation of Energy You have seen several examples of energy being used today. Just about everything you see or do involves energy. Energy is a bit mysterious—you can’t smell and in most cases you can’t even see it. Light if one form of energy you can see. You can’t see electricity, another form of energy, but you can see its effects in a glowing light bulb and you can feel its effects in the heat produced by the coils of a toaster. You can’t see energy in the food you eat, but you can see and feel its effects when your muscles use that energy to move. Energy—An Agent of Change If a baseball flies through the air and shatters a window, it certainly changes the window! When an object is able to change its environment, we say the object has energy. The baseball had energy and did work on the window by causing the window to move. In summary, the use of energy involves change. Scientists have some difficulty defining energy because it exists in so many different forms. Some of these forms include radiant, electrical, chemical, thermal, and nuclear energy. Traditionally, energy has been defined as the ability to do work—to cause something to move. But when work is performed, there is always a change. This connection offers a useful general definition. Energy is the ability to do work, or cause change. Kinetic Energy: On the Move Usually, when you think of energy, you think of action—of some motion taking place. Kinetic energy is energy in the form of motion. A spinning bicycle wheel, a flying Frisbee, or cross-country runners all have kinetic energy. How much kinetic energy something has depends on the mass and velocity of the moving object. The greater the mass a moving object has, the more kinetic energy it has. 17 Similarly, the greater an object’s velocity, the more kinetic energy it has. The truck traveling at 100km/hr in the figure below has more kinetic energy than the motorcycle traveling at the same speed. However, the motorcycle has more kinetic energy than an identical motorcycle traveling at 80 km/hr. Potential Energy Energy doesn’t have to involve motion. Even motionless, any sample of matter may have stored energy that gives it the potential to cause change if certain conditions are met. Potential energy is stored energy. The amount of potential energy a sample of matter has depends on its position or its condition. For example, a flowerpot sitting on a second-floor windowsill has potential energy due to its position. If something knocks the flowerpot off the windowsill, gravity will cause it to fall toward the ground. As it falls, its potential energy changes to kinetic energy. There are two factors to keep in mind when deciding whether work is being done: something has to move, and the motion must be in the same direction as the applied force. If you pick up a pile of books from the floor, work is done on the books. They move upward, in the direction of the applied force. If you hold the books in your arms, no work is done on the books. Some upward force is still being applied (to keep the books from 18 falling), but no movement is taking place. Even if you carry the books across the floor at a constant speed, no work is done on the books. The force being applied to the books is still upward, or vertical, but your motion across the floor is sideward, or horizontal. In the following paragraphs, you will examine the energy changes that result from the motion of a swing. Conservation of Energy Perhaps you have ridden on a playground swing like the one in the picture. Try to remember what it was like swinging back and forth, high and low. Now think about the energy changes involved in such a ride, illustrated in the Figure right. The ride starts with a push to get you moving—to give you some kinetic energy. As the swing rises, kinetic energy changes to potential energy of position. At the top of each swing, potential energy is greatest. Then, as the swing moves downward, potential energy changes to kinetic energy. At the bottom of each swing, kinetic energy is greatest and potential energy is at its minimum. As the swing continues to move back and forth, energy is converted from kinetic to potential to kinetic, over and over again. Taken together, the potential and kinetic energy of the swing make up its mechanical energy. Mechanical energy is the total amount of kinetic and potential energy in a system. 19 Conserving Energy—A Natural Law Scientists have learned that in any given situation, energy may change from one form to another, but the total amount of energy remains constant. In other words, energy is conserved. This fact is recognized as a law of nature. According to the law of conservation of energy, energy may change form but it cannot be created or destroyed under ordinary conditions. This law applies to closed systems, in which energy cannot enter or leave the system. Suppose the law of conservation of energy is applied to the swing. Would you expect the swing to continue moving back and forth forever? You know this doesn’t happen. The swing slows down and comes to a stop. Where does the energy go? If you think about it, friction and air resistance are always acting on the swing and rider. These unbalanced forces cause some of the mechanical energy of the swing to change to thermal energy—heat. With every pass of the swing, the temperatures of the swing, the rider, and the air around them go up a little bit. So the mechanical energy of the swing isn’t lost, it is converted to thermal energy. Thermal energy is discussed in the next section. Summary: • Energy is the ability to do work, or cause change. Energy exists in many different forms. Two of these forms are potential and kinetic energy. There are countless examples of how energy is converted from potential to kinetic, and vise versa. • Kinetic energy is energy in the form of motion. • Potential energy is stored energy. Potential energy depends on the position of an object. • Energy can change from form to other forms with no loss of total energy. • Work is the transfer of energy through motion. Work is done only when force produces motion in the direction of the force. • The Law of Conservation of Energy states that energy is not created or destroyed when changing forms in a closed system. 20 Section 3.2 Temperature, Heat, and Thermal Energy Terms: • Temperature • Thermal energy • Heat • Joules • Work Temperature What do you know about temperature? When the air temperature outside is high, you probably describe the weather as hot. Ice cream, which has a lower temperature, feels cold. The words hot and cold are commonly used to describe the temperature of a material. Although not very scientific, these terms can be useful. Just about everyone understands that hot indicates high temperature and cold indicates low temperature. When most people think of temperature, they automatically think of heat, too. This association makes sense, because heat and temperature are related. However, they are not the same. To understand the relationship between heat and temperature, you need to know about matter. Measuring Temperature Temperature is one of the most important factors affecting the weather. Air temperature is usually measured with a thermometer. A thermometer is a thin glass tube with a bulb on the end that contains a liquid, usually mercury or colored alcohol. Thermometers work because liquids expand when they are heated and contract when they are cooled. When the air temperature increases, the temperature of the liquid in the bulb also increases. This causes the liquid to expand and rise up the column. Temperature Scales Temperature is measured in units called degrees. Two temperature scales are commonly used: the Celsius scale and the Fahrenheit scale. Scientists use the Celsius scale. On the Celsius scale, the freezing point of pure water is 0°C and the boiling point of pure water at sea level is 100°C. Weather reports in the United States use the Fahrenheit scale. On the Fahrenheit scale, the freezing point of water is 32°F and the boiling point is 212°F. A third scale that is referenced in science is the Kelvin scale. Zero on the Kelvin scale represents absolute zero—a point that matter does not move at all. No matter how close scientists can get a particle to absolute zero, it is impossible! Remember, 21 every substance has particles that are in motion. Matter in Motion All matter is made up of particles so small that you can’t see them, even with an ordinary microscope. The particles that make up any object are constantly moving, even if the object itself appears perfectly still. Everyone you can think of—the book on your desk, the shoe on your foot, even the foot inside your shoe—is made up of moving particles. You know that moving things have kinetic energy. Because the particles that make up matter are in constant motion, you can conclude that they have kinetic energy. The faster the particles move, the more kinetic energy they have. Temperature is a measure of the average kinetic energy of the particles in a sample of matter. As the particles in an object move faster and their average kinetic energy becomes greater, the temperature of the object rises. Similarly, as the particles in an object move more slowly, their average kinetic energy decreases. Which particles are moving faster, those in pot A or those in pot B? Thermal Energy If you place an ice-cold teaspoon on top of a scoop of ice cream, like the image left, nothing will happen. But suppose you place a hot teaspoon on the ice cream. Now the ice cream under the spoon stars to melt. The hot spoon causes the ice cream to change because it transfers energy to the ice cream. Where does this energy come from? The spoon isn’t moving, and its position is the same as that which the cold 22 spoon had. So the energy is not due to the motion or position of the spoon. Instead, it is related to the temperature of the spoon. The change in the ice cream is caused by the flow of thermal energy from the spoon. Like temperature, thermal energy is related to the energy of the particles that make up matter. Thermal energy is the total energy of the particles in a material. This total includes both kinetic and potential energy. The kinetic energy is due to the vibrations and movements within and between particles. Forces that act within or between the particles determine the potential energy. For example, suppose you stack two hot teaspoons at the same temperature on a scoop of ice cream. What will happen? The two spoons will melt more ice cream than the single spoon did in the same amount of time. The stacked spoons have twice as much mass, and therefore, twice as many moving particles. The more mas a material has at the same temperature, the more thermal energy it has. Different kinds of matter have different thermal energies, even when mass and temperature are the same. For example, a 5-g sample of sand has a different thermal energy than a 5-g sample of pudding at the same temperature. This difference is due mainly to the ways in which the particles of the materials are bound together. It is important to remember that the thermal energy of a material depends on the total kinetic energy of its particles. The kinetic energy of the object itself has no effect on its thermal energy. For example, at 20°C, a golf ball has the same thermal energy whether it’s sitting on the ground or speeding through the air. Heat What would happen if you pressed your left hand against a cool tile wall? Your hand would feel cooler. Its temperature would have decreased. If you then touched the same spot on the wall with your right hand, the spot wouldn’t feel as cool as it did when you touched in originally. The temperature of the spot would have increased when you touched it with your left hand. Energy flowed from your warm left hand to the cool tile. Heat is the transfer of thermal energy that flows from something with a higher temperature to something with a lower temperature. Remember that, in most cases, heat flows from warmer to cooler materials—not from cooler to warmer. The next time you listen to a weather report, think about the difference between temperature and heat. Or when you drop an ice cube into your drink, think about how the cooling occurs. Does the melting ice cause the liquid to cool? Or does heat flowing form the liquid to the ice cool the drink and cause the ice to melt? 23 Like work, heat is measured in joules and involves transfer of energy. Heat is energy transferred between objects at different temperatures. Work is energy transferred when a force acts over a distance. Summary: • Recognize that heat is a form of energy and that temperature change results from adding or taking away heat from a system. • Temperature is a measure of the average kinetic energy of the particles in an object. • Thermal energy is the total energy of the particles in a material. This total includes both kinetic and potential energy. • Heat is the transfer of thermal energy that flows from something with a higher temperature to something with a lower temperature. • Heat is measured in joules and involves transfer of energy. • Work is energy transferred when a force acts over a distance. 24 Section 3.3 The Transfer of Thermal Energy Terms: • • • • • Conduction Fluid Conductor Radiation Convection Thermal energy moves from place to place in three forms: conduction, convection, and radiation. Conduction is the transfer of energy through matter by direct contact of particles. Recall that all matter is made up of tiny particles that are in constant motion. The temperature of a material is a measure of the average kinetic energy of its particles. Transfer by Collisions Energy is transferred when particles moving at different speeds bump into each other. When faster-moving particles collide with slower-moving particles, some of the momentum of the faster-moving particles passes along to the slow-moving particles. The faster particles slow down and the slower particles move up. Heat may be transferred by conduction through a given material or from one material to another. Think about what happens when one end of a metal spoon is placed in boiling water. (Figure below.) Heat from the water is transferred to the spoon. The end of the spoon in the water becomes hotter than the other end of the spoon, but eventually the entire spoon becomes hot. Conduction takes place in solids, liquids, and gases. Because their particles are packed closer together, solids usually conduct heat better than liquids or gases. However, some solids, such as the pots in the image right, conduct heat better than others. Many metals have loosely held electrons that 25 move around easily and transfer kinetic energy to nearby particles more efficiently. Silver, copper, and aluminum are good heat conductors, while woods, plastic, glass, and fiberglass are poor conductors of heat. Why do you thin cooking pots are made of metal? What are the handles usually made of? Convection Liquids and gases differ from solids because they flow. Any material that flows is a fluid. The most important way that thermal energy is transferred in fluids is by convection. Convection is the transfer of energy by the bulk movement of matter. This differs from conduction because in conduction, energy moves from particle to particle, but the particles themselves remain approximately in place. Alternatively, in convection, fluid particles move from one location to another, carrying energy with them. When heat is added to a fluid, the particles begin to move faster, just as the particles of a solid do. However, the particles of a fluid have more freedom to move. Therefore, they move farther apart, or expand. Consider a hot-air balloon being blow up. Heat from the flame causes the air inside the balloon to expand. Transfer by Currents Now think about what happens when a pot of water is heated. The stove burner heats the bottom of the pot by conduction. Water touching the bottom of the pot is also heated by conduction. As this water is heated, it expands and becomes less dense. Cooler, denser water at the top of the pot sinks and pushes the hot water upward. As the hot water rises, it cools by conduction, becomes denser, and sinks, forcing warmer water to rise. This movement creates convection currents. These currents transfer thermal energy from warmer to cooler parts of the fluid. Winds and some ocean currents are examples of convection currents. Radiation There are 150 million kilometers of empty space between the Earth and the sun. How does thermal energy reach Earth? In order for conduction or convection to take place, matter must be present. But there is almost no matter in outer space! There is a third type of heat transfer that does not require matter—radiation. Radiation is the transfer of energy in the form of waves. Energy that travels by radiation is 26 often called radiant energy. Once radiant energy from the sun reaches Earth, some of it is absorbed. Only radiant energy that is absorbed changes to thermal energy. Different materials absorb radiant energy differently. Shiny metals reflect radiant energy; dull materials absorb it. Dark-colored materials absorb more radiant energy than light-colored materials. This explains why summer clothing is usually made of lighter-colored materials, and winter clothing is darker colored. Any object warmer than 0 K emits radiation. If you hold your hand near a lighted electric bulb, your hand feels the heat. The bulb’s radiation is converted to thermal energy as your hand absorbs it. Summary: • Thermal energy moves from place to place in three forms: conduction, convection, and radiation. • Conduction involves direct contact between molecules. • Convection involves fluids. • Radiation is energy in the form of waves. 27