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Lecture PowerPoint Physics for Scientists and Engineers, 3rd edition Fishbane Gasiorowicz Thornton © 2005 Pearson Prentice Hall This work is protected by United States copyright laws and is provided solely for the use of instructors in teaching their courses and assessing student learning. Dissemination or sale of any part of this work (including on the World Wide Web) will destroy the integrity of the work and is not permitted. The work and materials from it should never be made available to students except by instructors using the accompanying text in their classes. All recipients of this work are expected to abide by these restrictions and to honor the intended pedagogical purposes and the needs of other instructors who rely on these materials. Chapter 7 Potential Energy and Conservation of Energy Main Points of Chapter 7 • Potential energy • Conservation of energy • Energy conservation in more than one dimension • Nonconservative forces 7-1 Potential Energy and Conservative Forces • For a conservative force, work only depends on endpoints of motion • There must be a function of the endpoints that represents the work 7-1 Potential Energy and Conservative Forces • For work done by gravity: (7-2) • U0 is an arbitrary constant • Only differences in potential energy have physical significance. 7-1 Potential Energy and Conservative Forces Using the force rather than the work: (7-4) The inverse: (7-5) 7-1 Potential Energy and Conservative Forces Conservation of Energy Definition of total mechanical energy: (7-7) Total mechanical energy is conserved if only conservative forces are acting. 7-1 Potential Energy and Conservative Forces Mass on a spring Spring force: (7-12) Potential energy: (7-13) 7-2 Energy Conservation and Allowed Motion • Total energy is constant • As kinetic energy increases, potential energy decreases, and vice versa • The maximum potential energy occurs when the kinetic energy is zero 7-2 Energy Conservation and Allowed Motion Part of a cycle of a mass on a spring, showing pure potential energy, a mix, and pure kinetic energy: 7-2 Energy Conservation and Allowed Motion Potential energy curves: Object cannot move farther than the point where all energy is potential 7-2 Energy Conservation and Allowed Motion Equilibrium • Stable equilibrium: force returns object to place where F=0 • Unstable equilibrium: force moves object away from place where F=0 • Neutral equilibrium: force is zero over an extended distance 7-2 Energy Conservation and Allowed Motion Equilibrium 7-3 Motion in Two or Three Dimensions • Potential surfaces can be visualized as topographic maps • Total energy depends on speed and position in 3-d space: (7-15) Potential energy for projectile motion: • Same as before, as force is only in y-direction 7-3 Motion in Two or Three Dimensions Central Forces General form: (7-17) • Force depends only on distance r from a central point 7-3 Motion in Two or Three Dimensions Central Forces Specific example: the gravitational force Potential energy: Force: 7-4 Is Energy Conservation a General Principle? Yes! • Need to include all types of energy – thermal, sound, light, electric, etc • All fundamental forces are conservative – conservation of energy always holds • One of the most fundamental principles of physics 7-4 Is Energy Conservation a General Principle? Energy Conservation and Nonconservative Forces • Total mechanical energy not conserved when nonconservative forces present • Work done by nonconservative forces equals change in mechanical energy • Total energy is conserved when all forms are counted (7-18) Summary of Chapter 7 • Potential energy can be defined for conservative forces • Total mechanical energy conserved if all forces conservative • In repetitive motion, energy changes from all kinetic to all potential and back • Stable, unstable, and neutral equilibrium • Energy conservation – including all forms of energy – is one of the foundations of physics