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The Physics of Energy sources B. Maffei School of Physics and Astronomy [email protected] Turing Building room 3.125 Intro/Backgd 1 Practicalities ! PowerPoint presentations will be on Blackboard ! The material will also be available on the web: • http://www.jb.man.ac.uk/~bm/Teaching/en_sources/index.html ! Lectures are the basis of the course ! Will need further readings and work • Boyle, Everett and Ramage, Energy Systems and Sustainability (2003) – From which many pictures have been taken * ref 1 • Lilley, J. Nuclear Physics Principles and Applications (Wiley 2006) • Krane, K.S. Introductory Nuclear Physics (Wiley 1998) • Twidell, J.W. & Weir, A.D. Renewable energy resources, (Spon 1986) ! Do not hesitate to ask questions ! Exam: 1:30 in May/June ! Answer all questions of part 1 AND 2 sets of questions out of 3 ! No notes allowed. Necessary constants will be given. Intro/Backgd 2 Foreword ! This is an option for 1st and 2nd year ! We will see a wide range of Physics concepts ! But sometimes not in depth ! It is your task to go further than the lecture notes ! This course will need/develop basic knowledge on various topics: ! General physics concepts: electricity, dynamics, nuclear…. ! Chemistry (not much!) ! Geo-politics (just a bit...) Intro/Backgd 3 The Physics of Energy sources Introduction - What will you learn? - Back to basics Intro/Backgd 4 What will you learn? ! Introduction ! Geopolitical context ! Human needs: Before, now and for the future ! Where does our energy come from ? ! Government policies ! Pre-Nuclear energies Intro/Backgd 5 J. Dalton E. Rutherford The atom – Nuclear physics E. Schrödinger N. Bohr Fusion - Theory Radioactive decays A. Einstein E. Fermi Fission - Theory M. Curie H. Becquerel Fission applications Nuclear power plants Radiation effects Fusion Current research Nuclear waste Spherical Tokamak Culham (UK) Greenpeace Laser Megajoule - CEA Intro/Backgd 6 Mechanical • Hydroelectric • Tidal • Wind • Wave Wind turbines near Copenhagen The future of clean renewable energy Other fuels • Bio-fuels • Biomass Courtesy of middlebury college-USA Intro/Backgd Geothermal Use of heat from geothermal activity Production and storage Hydrogen cells Solar 7 Definitions – a bit of history Oxford dictionary Exact, but what does it mean ? 17th – 18th century thinking: ! Force ! Newton: Motion of an object is changed by forces • A force is needed to produce an acceleration a of an object of mass m F = m.a ! Work ! Rankine: work done by a force to move a mass m over a distance d Work = F.d Intro/Backgd 8 Kinetic and Potential energies v=0 Free falling object F = m.g d F2 F = m.g Intro/Backgd d F2 Is the force applied against the gravity KE = 0 ; PE = m.g.h 1 KE = .m.v 2 2 h v=0 1 Kinetic energy = m.g.d = .m.v f2 2 v = vf More general: throwing an object in the air v=0 Energy gained by object = work done by gravitation force PE = m.g.d KE = 0 ; PE = 0 9 Various forms of Energy ! From the 18th century explanation of other forms of energies ! ! ! ! ! ! Heat thermodynamics Chemical: exothermic and endothermic reactions Electrical: electric charges with creation of currents and potential differences Electromagnetic radiation: photons – EM fields Nuclear: nuclear forces – fission …. Mass: conversion between mass and energy ! For an isolated system, we can have conversion of energy (transformation) but the overall energy remains constant ! Intro/Backgd 10 Units Various units for the same quantity: we will try to stick to S.I. Units: [m], [Kg], [s], [A] ! Force: newton (N) – [N] = [kg].[m].[s-2] ! Force needed to accelerate 1kg of mass by 1m.s-2 ! Energy: joule (J) – [J]=[N].[m] ; [J]=[C].[V] ! Energy corresponding to a force of 1N moving an object over a distance of 1m along direction of force ! Work to move a charge of 1 coulomb through a potential diff of 1 volt ! Other units • 1J = 6.2415x1018 eV (electron-Volt) • 1J = 107 ergs 1J = 0.2388 cal (calories) cal ≠ Cal • 2.7778x10-4 watt.h strange unit but widely used: electricity bill ! Power: watt (W) – [W]=[J].[s-1] ; [W]=[V].[A] ! Energy of 1J dissipated during 1s – P diss. in a resistor with 1A under 1V ! Photometry ! Power per unit of surface W.m-2 Intro/Backgd 11 Angle definitions circumference of circle of radius unity = 2π c l θ r ! Intro/Backgd l sin(" ) = c r cos(θ ) = c l tg(" ) = ~ " for small angle r here s ~ l 12 Solid angle Surface of the sphere 4πr2 For total sphere Ω=4π steradian For small angles r~c θ c r b S~πb2 Ω~πb2/r2=πθ2 Intro/Backgd 13 Photometry – Energy from EM radiation (1) ! Electromagnetic radiation has an associated energy: ! Energy in EM field Poynting vector ! Energy of photon (particle) E = hν with h = 6.626 ×10 −34 J.s (Planck constant) andν being the frequency P=power that a source will emit over 4π steradian and across the whole EM spectrum: Power (a.k.a. radiant flux, luminosity or flux in Astronomy) in Watts Ex: Solar Luminosity = 3.827 . 1026 W For a surface element dS of the source: emittance = dP/dS in W/m2 Or power received from the source by an element dS: irradiance=dP/dS in W/m2 Intro/Backgd 14 Photometry – Energy from EM radiation (2) If we consider only a portion dν of the EM spectrum: spectral power (or spectral radiance – to be avoided) = dP/dν in W/Hz Power (emitted by a source) contained in a solid angle element dΩ: radiant intensity = dP/dΩ in W/sr dν dΩ Spectral radiance: in W.sr-1.m-2.Hz-1 Spectral irradiance: in W.m-2.Hz-1 In Astronomy 1Jansky (Jy)=10-26 W.m-2.Hz-1 Intro/Backgd 15 A few basic examples of energy / power consumption ! Climbing stairs Mass.Gravity.height 75kg.10m.s-2 .0.5m Power = = = 375W unit of time 1sec ! Human body requirement Average of 2400 kcal per day à ~10000 kJ per day Power needs: ~ 115W ! Electrical appliances From 1-2W (elec. clock) to 10kW (large oven) ! Nuclear power plant Typical power output few GW ! Astrophysics: 1 Solar Luminosity L = 3.827 . 1026 W=382.7YW Stanby power ? Intro/Backgd 16