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Chapters 6, 7 Energy Energy • What is energy? • Energy - is a fundamental, basic notion in physics • Energy is a scalar, describing state of an object or a system • Description of a system in ‘energy language’ is equivalent to a description in ‘force language’ • Energy approach is more general and more effective than the force approach • Equations of motion of an object (system) can be derived from the energy equations Scalar product of two vectors • The result of the scalar (dot) multiplication of two vectors is a scalar A B AB cos • Scalar products of unit vectors iˆ iˆ 11cos 0 1 ˆj ˆj 1 kˆ kˆ 1 iˆ ˆj 11cos 90 0 iˆ kˆ 0 ˆj kˆ 0 Scalar product of two vectors • The result of the scalar (dot) multiplication of two vectors is a scalar A B AB cos • Scalar product via unit vectors A B ( Axiˆ Ay ˆj Az kˆ)( Bxiˆ By ˆj Bz kˆ) A B Ax Bx Ay By Az Bz Some calculus • In 1D case dx v dt v2 d dv dv dx vdv 2 a dx dt dt dx dx ma Fnet mv 2 d 2 dx mv2 Fnet dx d 2 Some calculus • In 1D case mv2 Fnet dx d 2 • In 3D case, similar derivations yield mv2 d K Fnet dr d 2 • K – kinetic energy mv 2 K 2 Kinetic energy •K = mv2/2 • SI unit: kg*m2/s2 = J (Joule) James Prescott Joule (1818 - 1889) • Kinetic energy describes object’s ‘state of motion’ • Kinetic energy is a scalar Work-kinetic energy theorem mv2 dK Fnet dr d 2 rf K f K i Fnet dr Wnet ri • Wnet – work (net) • Work is a scalar • Work is equal to the change in kinetic energy, i.e. work is required to produce a change in kinetic energy • Work is done on the object by a force Work: graphical representation xf W Fx dx lim xi x 0 xf F x x xi • 1D case: Graphically - work is the area under the curve Fx(x) Chapter 6 Problem 52 A force with magnitude F = a√x acts in the x-direction, where a = 9.5 N/m1/2. Calculate the work this force does as it acts on an object moving from (a) x = 0 to x = 3.0 m; (b) 3.0 m to 6.0 m; and (c) 6.0 m to 9.0 m. Net work vs. net force • We can consider a system, with several forces acting on it • Each force acting on the system, considered separately, produces its own work rf • Since rf Wnet ri Fnet Fk dr Wk ri Fk (vector sum) k r r f f Fnet dr Fk dr Fk dr ri r k k i Wnet Wk ( scalar sum) k Work done by a constant force • If a force is constant rf W ri rf F dr F dr F r ri • If the displacement and the constant force are not parallel W F r Fr cos Fd cos Work done by a constant force W F r Fr cos Fd cos Work done by a spring force • Hooke’s law in 1D Fs kx • From the definition of work xf xf xi xi Ws Fs dx kxdx 2 i kx2f kx 2 2 Work done by the gravitational force • Gravity force is ~ constant near the surface of the Earth Wg mgd cos • If the displacement is vertically up Wg mgd cos 180 mgd • In this case the gravity force does a negative work (against the direction of motion) Lifting an object • We apply a force F to lift an object • Force F does a positive work Wa • The net work done Wnet K K f K i Wa Wg • If in the initial and final states the object is at rest, then the net work done is zero, and the work done by the force F is Wa Wg mgd Power • Average power Pavg W t • Instantaneous power – the rate of doing work dW P dt • SI unit: J/s = kg*m2/s3 = W (Watt) dW F dr F v P dt dt P Fv cos James Watt (1736-1819) Chapter 6 Problem 36 A 75-kg long-jumper takes 3.1 s to reach a prejump speed of 10 m/s. What’s his power output? Conservative forces • The net work done by a conservative force on a particle moving around any closed path is zero Wab,1 Wba, 2 0 Wab,1 Wba, 2 Wab, 2 Wba, 2 Wab,1 Wab, 2 • The net work done by a conservative force on a particle moving between two points does not depend on the path taken by the particle Conservative forces: examples • Gravity force mghup mghdown 0 • Spring force 2 kxright 2 2 kxleft 2 0 Potential energy • For conservative forces we introduce a definition of potential energy U U W • The change in potential energy of an object is being defined as being equal to the negative of the work done by conservative forces on the object • Potential energy is associated with the arrangement of the system subject to conservative forces Potential energy • For 1D case xf U U f U i W F ( x)dx U ( x) F ( x)dx C xi dU ( x) F ( x) dx • A conservative force is associated with a potential energy • There is a freedom in defining a potential energy: adding or subtracting a constant does not change the force • In 3D F ( x, y, z ) U ( x, y, z ) iˆ U ( x, y, z ) ˆj U ( x, y, z ) kˆ x y z Gravitational potential energy • For an upward direction the y axis yf U ( y ) (mg )dy mgy f mgyi mgy yi U g ( y ) mgy Gravitational potential energy U g ( y ) mgy Elastic potential energy • For a spring obeying the Hooke’s law U ( x) xf xi kx2f kxi2 (kx)dx 2 2 kx U s ( x) 2 2 Chapter 7 Problem 37 A particle moves along the x-axis under the influence of a force F = ax2 + b, where a and b are constants. Find its potential energy as a function of position, taking U = 0 at x = 0. Conservation of mechanical energy • Mechanical energy of an object is Emec K U • When a conservative force does work on the object K W U W K U K f U f Ki U i K f K i (U f U i ) Emec, f Emec,i • In an isolated system, where only conservative forces cause energy changes, the kinetic and potential energies can change, but the mechanical energy cannot change Conservation of mechanical energy • From the work-kinetic energy theorem K Wnet • When both conservative a nonconservative forces do work on the object Wnet Wc Wnc U Wnc K K U Wnc Internal energy • The energy associated with an object’s temperature is called its internal energy, Eint • In this example, the friction does work and increases the internal energy of the surface Chapter 7 Problem 53 A spring of constant k = 340 N/m is used to launch a 1.5-kg block along a horizontal surface whose coefficient of sliding friction is 0.27. If the spring is compressed 18 cm, how far does the block slide? Conservation of mechanical energy: pendulum Potential energy curve dU ( x) F ( x) dx Potential energy curve: equilibrium points Neutral equilibrium Unstable equilibrium Stable equilibrium Questions? Answers to the even-numbered problems Chapter 6 Problem 14: 9.6 × 106 J Answers to the even-numbered problems Chapter 6 Problem 40: The hair dryer consumes more energy. Answers to the even-numbered problems Chapter 6 Problem 50: 360 J Answers to the even-numbered problems Chapter 7 Problem 14: (a) 7.0 MJ (b) 1.0 MJ Answers to the even-numbered problems Chapter 7 Problem 24: (a) ± 4.9 m/s (b) ± 7.0 m/s (c) ≈ 11 m Answers to the even-numbered problems Chapter 7 Problem 38: 95 m