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IP4.11.4 Work and energy Work and energy © Oxford University Press 2011 07/05/17 © Class Leading Ltd. 2013. Permission granted for non-commercial educational use provided that this copyright notice is included. IP4.11.4 Work and energy Using graphs to summarise motion D 1. Distances measured in one direction are ________, and in the other are _______ 2. The _______ of an object is its ______ and the ________ of motion. 3. The velocity of an object moving in a straight line is ________ if it is moving in one direction and ________ if it is moving in the opposite direction. C 4. Sketch a velocity-time graph for an object that is: a) stationary b) moving in a straight line with constant speed c) moving in a straight line with steadily increasing 1. Sketch a distance-time graph for an object that is: a) stationary b) moving at constant speed A/B speed c v a d b negative t direction positive b velocity a negative c c) moving with increasing speed t distance /m positive 2. Using the graph to the right 200 A a) which is moving faster, A or B? A – steeper slope / gradient 100 B b) Calculate the speed of B Speed = gradient = (100-0) = 100 = 5 m/s (20-0) 20 10 20 © Oxford University Press 2011 time/s IP4.11.4 Work and energy Doing work: When you push or pull something and make it move, you do work. © Oxford University Press 2011 IP4.11.4 Work and energy Energy and work • • • • • • • Whenever an object moves energy is used This also means that work has been done E.g you open a door You have used force to open the door You have used up energy to open the door Therefore you have done work The energy has been transferred to opening the door © Oxford University Press 2011 IP4.11.4 Work and energy • When an object is moved by a force, we say work is done on the object by the force • The work done on the object is equal to the energy transferred to the object • E.g. the energy you use to open the door is transferred to the door (door moves) • If the energy you used up to open the door was 20J then the work done was 20J • Where does the energy come from? • When you do work against friction, most of the energy gets lost as heat and sometimes as sound © Oxford University Press 2011 IP4.11.4 Work and energy How much work? Imagine pushing a car along a road. • You must apply a force . . . • . . . and you push the car a certain distance. work done (in joules) = force (in newtons) distance (in metres) © Oxford University Press 2011 IP4.11.4 Work and energy Work done, GPE and KE LQ: Can I calculate the energy used in different situations? © Oxford University Press 2011 IP4.11.4 Work and energy An example I push my car 30 m. I push with a force of 400 N. work done = force distance = 400 N 30 m = 12 000 J © Oxford University Press 2011 IP4.11.4 Work and energy Lifting something • If you lift something up, you must exert enough force to balance the force of gravity. • The upward force is equal to the weight of the object. © Oxford University Press 2011 IP4.11.4 Work and energy Lifting something If you lift something through a certain distance work done = force distance where force = weight of the object lifted © Oxford University Press 2011 IP4.11.4 Work and energy An example A woman lifts up her baby from the floor. The baby weighs 100 N. The woman lifts the baby up by 2 m. work done = force distance = weight distance = 100 N 2 m = 200 J © Oxford University Press 2011 IP4.11.4 Work and energy Work done = energy transferred When someone does work, energy is transferred: • from the person who exerts the force • to other places. amount of work done = amount of energy transferred © Oxford University Press 2011 IP4.11.4 Work and energy Let’s look first at lifting distance lifted When you lift something up, you do work. work done = force distance = weight distance lifted The gravitational potential energy of the object you lift has increased: change in gravitational potential energy = weight height gain © Oxford University Press 2011 IP4.11.4 Work and energy Different paths? What if you lift something, but not straight up? work done = force distance moved in the direction of the force change in gravitational potential energy = weight vertical height gain © Oxford University Press 2011 IP4.11.4 Work and energy 1. Hannah pushes a book 5m along the table with a force of 5N. She gets tired and decides to call it a day. How much work did she do? 2. Courtney lifts a laptop 2m into the air with a force of 10N. How much work does she do? What type of energy did the laptop gain? 3. Tom does 200J of work by pushing a wheelbarrow with a force of 50N. How far did he push it? What type of energy did the wheelbarrow gain? 4. Dan cuddles his cat and lifts it 1.5m in the air. If he did 75J of work how much force did he use? 25J 20J, GPE 4m, KE 50N 5. Simon drives his car 1000m. If the engine was producing a 2MJ © Oxford University Press 2011 driving force of 2000N how much work did the car do? IP4.11.4 questions… Work and energy Some example How much gravitational potential energy have the following objects gained?: 1. A brick that weighs 10N lifted to the top of a house (10m), 100J 2. A 1,000kg car lifted by a ramp up to a height of 2m, 20KJ 3. A 70kg person lifted up 50cm by a friend. 350J How much GPE have the following objects lost?: 1. A 2N football dropping out of the air after being kicked up 30m, 60J 2. A 0.5N egg falling 10m out of a bird nest, 5J 3. A 1,000kg car falling off its 200cm ramp. 20KJ © Oxford University Press 2011 IP4.11.4 Work and energy © Oxford University Press 2011 IP4.11.4 Work and energy © Oxford University Press 2011 IP4.11.4 Work and energy © Oxford University Press 2011 IP4.11.4 Work and energy © Oxford University Press 2011 IP4.11.4 Work and energy Work done = energy transferred What happens if you push something horizontally? • Imagine pushing a cart with very well-oiled wheels (no friction). • The speed of the cart will increase while the force acts. work done = change in kinetic energy of the cart © Oxford University Press 2011 IP4.11.4 Work and energy Calculating kinetic energy The kinetic energy of a moving object depends on: • its mass (how big it is) • its speed (how fast it is moving). The equation for calculating the kinetic energy of a moving object is: kinetic energy = ½ mass (speed)2 © Oxford University Press 2011 IP4.11.4 Work and energy What if friction cannot be ignored? Think about pushing a car. As you push it, you transfer energy from your body to: • the car – increasing its kinetic energy • parts of the car (and the surroundings) – which heat up because of friction. the amount of work you do = the amount of energy transferred © Oxford University Press 2011 IP4.11.4 Work and energy Now let’s look at an example that brings several of these ideas together. . . . . . pushing a car up a slope. © Oxford University Press 2011 IP4.11.4 Work and energy Pushing a car uphill • If you push your car uphill, you do work: work done = force distance • You increase the gravitational potential energy of your car: change in gravitational potential energy = weight vertical height gain • Are these the same? If not, why not? © Oxford University Press 2011 IP4.11.4 Work and energy The calculation work done in pushing = force distance = 450 N 30 m = 13 500 J gain in gravitational potential energy = weight vertical height gain = 900 N 1 m = 9000 J © Oxford University Press 2011 IP4.11.4 Work and energy So why the difference? • Some of the energy is transferred to the surroundings – heating them up. • Only part of it goes to increasing the gravitational potential energy of the car. • If no energy is lost as heat you can assume that kinetic energy = gravitational potential energy (for falling objects only) © Oxford University Press 2011 A diver who has a mass of 50 kg dives off a diving board 3.0 metres above the water level. What is her kinetic energy when she reaches the w IP4.11.4 Work and energy • A diver who has a mass of 50 kg dives off a diving board 3.0 metres above the water level. What is her kinetic energy when she reaches the water? © Oxford University Press 2011 IP4.11.4 Work and energy • Kinetic energy gained = gravitational potential energy lost • Kinetic energy gained = weight × height • You must calculate her weight to use in this equation • Weight = mass × gravitational field strength • Weight = 50 kg × 10 N / kg • Weight = 500 N • Kinetic energy gained = weight × height • Kinetic energy gained = 500 N × 3 m • Kinetic energy gained = 1500 J © Oxford University Press 2011 IP4.11.4 Work and energy • How fast is the diver moving when she reaches the water? • Ke = 0.5mv2 © Oxford University Press 2011 IP4.11.4 Work and energy • Put her kinetic energy (the 1500J you have calculated) into the kinetic energy equation together with her mass • Kinetic energy = 1/2 × mass × speed2 • 1500 J = ½ × 50 × speed2 = 25 × speed2 • So speed2 = 1500/25 = 60 (This is not the answer yet! It is speed2!) • So her speed = square root of 60 = 7.7 m/s © Oxford University Press 2011