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Midterm 1: July 9 Will cover material from Chapters 1-6 Go to the room where you usually have recitation Practice exam available on-line and in the library 7/8/04 1 Chapter 7 Kinetic Energy and Work 7/8/04 2 Energy A property of the state of an object Scalar quantity – no direction Conserved – cannot be created or destroyed, but it can change from one form to another or be exchanged from one object to another Units: Joule = kg m2/s2 7/8/04 3 Kinds of Energy Kinetic (movement) Potential Gravitational Spring Chemical bonds Mass (E=mc2…) Thermal And more… 7/8/04 4 Kinetic Energy Kinetic Energy Energy of motion For an object of mass m moving with speed v: K mv 1 2 2 Also kinetic energy associated with rotation, vibration, etc. More on that later… 7/8/04 5 Kinetic Energy: Orders of Magnitude K = ½mv2 for some common objects: Earth orbiting sun: 2x1029 J Car at 60 mph: 100,000 J Baseball pitch: 300 J A man walking: 40 J Angry bee: 0.005 J 7/8/04 6 Work Work Energy transferred by a force Work done on an object is the energy transferred to/from it W > 0 energy added W < 0 energy taken away W = F • r Work done on an object by a constant force F while moving through a displacement r 7/8/04 7 Dot or Scalar Product A B A B cos f Ax Bx Ay By Az Bz f is the angle between the vectors if you put their tails together B f Measures “how much” one vector lies along another A 7/8/04 8 What Does It Mean Physically? F r F F r Fr cos q q r F||r W > 0 if q < 90° force is adding energy to object W < 0 if q > 90° force is reducing energy of object W = 0 if 7/8/04 Fr 9 Work Examples Push on a wall r = 0, so no work is done (W = 0) Lift a weight against gravity at constant speed… d Wgrav Fgrav d mgd Wlift Flift d mgd Ftot = 0 Wtot = 0 Note: Kinetic Energy is constant… 7/8/04 10 Work Against Gravity Wlift=mgh A weightlifter does work when lifting a weight 7/8/04 11 Work for Tension, Gravity, Friction What is the work done by gravity, tension, and friction? Guess that the weight of the pack is 250 lb. = 113 kg Iguazu Falls: 269 ft = 82 m Vertical ascent: Wgravity = -mgh = -(113 kg)(9.8 m/s2)(82 m) = -90,800 J Wtension = -Wgravity = 90,800 J 7/8/04 12 Work for Tension, Gravity, Friction What is the work done by gravity, tension, and friction? Horizontal pull (at the end): use d~50 ft=15.2 m, μk = 1.0 Wfriction = Ff d = -μkmg d = -(1.0)(113 kg)(9.8 m/s2)(15.2 m) = -16,800 J Wtension = -Wfriction = 16,800 J 7/8/04 13 Work Due to Friction v Ffr The frictional force always opposes the motion: Moving to the right: 7/8/04 Moving to the left: W F fr x W F fr x x 0 x 0 W negative in both cases 14 Another Work Example Consider a pig sliding down frictionless ramp: N d Fg q Work done by the normal force: WNormal N d N d 0 Work from the gravitational force: Wgrav F d 7/8/04 mgd cos(90 q ) mgd sin q mgh d h θ 15 Work-Kinetic Energy Theorem v f vi 2a( x f xi ) 2 For constant acceleration: v f vi 2 Since Ftot = ma: Multiply by ½m: But ½mv2 = K: 2 1 2 2 2Ftot, x m ( x f xi ) mv f 12 mvi Ftot, x ( x f xi ) 2 2 K f K i Ftot, x x Easy to extrapolate to three dimensions K F d Wtot The total work done on an object is the change in its kinetic energy! 7/8/04 16 Total Work in One Dimension F For a small segment x, W F(x)x x From x1 to x2: Wtot S F(x)x = area under curve x1 x x2 x1 < x < x2 To be exact: 7/8/04 x2 W F ( x)dx x1 17 Work in Two Dimensions In one dimension motion and force are always in the same direction (or opposite directions) This is not true in two dimensions F dr How do we generalize work and kinetic energy to motion in two dimensions? 7/8/04 18 Work Along an Arbitrary Path Looking at a small patch of the path: F l W Fx x Fy y F l Δy Δx Over the whole path: W finish start 7/8/04 F dl x2 y2 z2 x1 y1 z1 Fx dx Fy dy Fz dz 19 Restating the Work-Kinetic Energy Theorem K W Constant force: ( 12 mv ) F d 2 Variable force: ( 12 mv2 ) F dl 7/8/04 20 A Formal Derivation xf W= Newton’s F(x) dx xi 2nd Law xf W = m a(x) dx xi Using the chain rule: dv dv dx dv a(x)= = =v dt dx dt dx xf vf dv W=m v dx=m v dv dx xi vi 7/8/04 vf vf 1 2 W = m v dv = mv 2 vi vi 1 2 1 2 = mv f mvi 2 2 21 An Example vi=60 mph =26.8 m/s μk=0.9 x 150 ft 45.7 m Will the car be able to stop before hitting the moose? 7/8/04 22 An Example (continued) Friction from the tires on the road will slow the car: F fr k N k mg The work done by friction will be: From the work-energy theorem: K f Ki W 1 2 mv f mvi k mg x 2 1 2 2 2 W fr F fr x k mg x 7/8/04 1 vf 1 (26.8 m / s) 2 x 2 k g 2 (0.9)(9.8 m / s 2 ) Just miss the moose! x 40.8 m 23 Example: Pile Driver Drop a big mass to drive a nail into a board Big Mass d 7/8/04 24 The Pile Driver How much force is exerted on the nail? m 1) Work done by gravity on freely falling pile W1 = (-mg)(-h-x) = mg(h+x) h 2) Work done on the nail W2 = F(-x) = -Fx 3) Total Work = 0 x W = W1+W2 = mg(h+x) – Fx = 0 F= 7/8/04 mg(h+x) x 25 Example: Slowing a Bus 5.45 x 103 kg vi=75 mph=33.5 m/s vf=65 mph=29.0 m/s How much work is done slowing down a bus? Ki = 1 2 K f = 12 m v2f mvi2 = 12 ( 5.45 103 kg) ( 33.5 m/s)2 = 12 ( 5.45 x 103 kg) ( 29.0 m/s)2 = 3.0 106 J = 2.3 x 106 J W K f K i 2.3 106 J 3.0 106 J 7/8/04 W 7 105 J 26 Example: (continued) How far does the bus travel while slowing? Fbrake = 2.75 x 104 N xf W= F(x) dx xi F xi xf x Area under F(x) curve: W = Fbrake (x f -xi ) 7/8/04 Fbrake 27 Example: (continued) W = Fbrake ( x f -xi ) W ( x f -xi ) Fbrake -7 105 J ( x f -xi ) -2.75 10 4 N 7 105 kg m2 /s 2 2.75 10 4 kg m/s2 ( x f -xi ) 25 m. Fbrake 2.75 104 N 2 a 5 . 0 m/s m 5.45 103 kg 7/8/04 28 The Spring: A Variable Force Springs exert force when stretched or compressed Hooke’s Law: F = - kx k = "spring constant" big k stiff spring 7/8/04 positive x x=0 Defines equilibrium position x = 0 no force x < 0 F > 0 spring pushes out x > 0 F < 0 spring pulls in 29 Work Done By a Spring How much work by spring in moving from xi to xf? Fspring x=0 Fspring xi x=0 xf xf xi xi W F ( x)dx xf 1 2 1 2 (kx)dx kxi kx f 2 2 If |xi| < |xf| then spring takes energy away 7/8/04 30 Example: 10 cm Fspring Fpull You stretch a spring 10 cm and must apply a 10 N force to hold the spring in place. What is the spring constant, and how much work did you do on the spring to stretch it? Fspring kx k 7/8/04 Fspring x (10 N ) 100 N / m 0.1 m 31 Example: 10 cm Fspring Fpull The work done by the spring is: Wspring kxi kx f 1 2 2 12 kx f 1 2 2 2 12 (100 N / m)(0.1 m) 2 0.5 J So the work I do on the spring is W pull Wspring 0.5 J 7/8/04 32 Power Work doesn’t depend on the time interval Work to climb a flight of stairs 10 s 1 min 1 hour ~3000 J Power is work done per unit time W Pavg t dW dx Instantaneous Power: P F Fv dt dt Average Power: Units 7/8/04 Work time 1J = 1 Watt 1s 1 hp = 746 W 33 Power in 3-D For a constant force: dW Fx dx Fy dy Fz dz So power will be: dW P dt dx dy dz Fx Fy Fz dt dt dt Fx v x Fy v y Fz v z F v 7/8/04 34 Express Elevator Say a 900 kg elevator travels 135 floors (400 m) in 40 s. It accelerates at 2.4 m/s2 until it reaches a velocity of 12 m/s. Find the average power (going up) W = mgh = (900 kg)(9.8 m/s2)(400 m) m = 900 kg a = 2.4 m/s2 vmax = 12 m/s = 3.5 x 106 J Pavg 7/8/04 W 3.5 106 J 8.8 104 W t 40 s 35 Express Elevator (continued) Maximum Instantaneous Power: P = Fv F a Maximum just when elevator reaches cruising speed going up F – mg = ma F = m(g+a) m = 900 kg a = 2.4 m/s2 vmax = 12 m/s P = (900 kg)(9.8 m/s2+2.4 m/s2)(12 m/s) = 130,000 W 7/8/04 36 An Application A car engine can supply some maximum amount of power. How will the car’s velocity change when it accelerates at constant power? 7/8/04 37 Acceleration at Constant Power Work Power time Work Power time Start from v = 0 and use work-energy theorem: 1 2 mv Pt 2 2 Pt 2 v m 2 Pt v m 7/8/04 Acceleration is not constant! 38 Why Cars Need Gears P Fv There is some maximum power at which the engine can operate. Shifting to a higher gear reduces the force applied to the wheels, allowing for a higher top speed. F must be larger than the air resistance for the car to continue accelerating. 7/8/04 39 Accelerating from 0 to 60 How much average horsepower is needed to accelerate a 1100 kg car from 0 to 60 mph in 3.1 seconds? 1 K f Ki W 1 2 mv Pt P 2 1 2 mv 2 t 2 1100 kg ( 60 mph ) P 2 3.1 s 1100kg (26.8m / s ) 2 3.1 s 1 2 1.27 105 W 171 horsepower In reality, there are transmission losses, etc., so you need much more horsepower to achieve this level of performance. 7/8/04 40 Example: (Problem 7.37) The force (but not the power) to tow a boat at constant velocity is proportional to the speed. If a speed of 4.0 km/h requires 7.5 kW, how much power does a speed of 12 km/hr require? 7/8/04 41