Top Banner
Kinetic Energy and Work; Potential Energy;Conservation of Energy. Lecture 07 Thursday: 5 February 2004
26

Kinetic Energy and Work; Potential Energy;Conservation of Energy.

Feb 11, 2016

Download

Documents

RIVER

Kinetic Energy and Work; Potential Energy;Conservation of Energy. Lecture 07 Thursday: 5 February 2004. WORK. Work provides a means of determining the motion of an object when the force applied to it is known as a function of position. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Kinetic Energy and Work; Potential Energy;Conservation of Energy.

Kinetic Energy and Work; Potential Energy;Conservation

of Energy.

Lecture 07Thursday: 5 February 2004

Page 2: Kinetic Energy and Work; Potential Energy;Conservation of Energy.
Page 3: Kinetic Energy and Work; Potential Energy;Conservation of Energy.
Page 4: Kinetic Energy and Work; Potential Energy;Conservation of Energy.
Page 5: Kinetic Energy and Work; Potential Energy;Conservation of Energy.
Page 6: Kinetic Energy and Work; Potential Energy;Conservation of Energy.

WORK

•Work provides a means of determining the motion of an object when the force applied to it is known as a function of position. •For example, the force exerted by a spring varies with position:

F=-kx where k is the spring constant and x is the displacement from equilibrium.

Page 7: Kinetic Energy and Work; Potential Energy;Conservation of Energy.

WORK (Constant Force)

WW Fd

F dcos

Page 8: Kinetic Energy and Work; Potential Energy;Conservation of Energy.

WORK (Variable Force)

W F x dxxx

i

f ( )

Page 9: Kinetic Energy and Work; Potential Energy;Conservation of Energy.

Work Energy Theorem

• Wnet is the work done by

• Fnet the net force acting on a body.

W F x dxnet netxx

i

f ( )

Page 10: Kinetic Energy and Work; Potential Energy;Conservation of Energy.

Work Energy Theorem (continued)

W F dx

madx m dvdt

dx

m dxdt

dv m vdv

net netxx

xx

xx

vv

vv

i

f

i

f

i

f

i

f

i

f

Page 11: Kinetic Energy and Work; Potential Energy;Conservation of Energy.

Work Energy Theorem (continued)

W m vdv

m v m v v

W mv mv

net vv

v

v

f i

net f i

i

f

i

f

212

2 2

12

2 12

2

2( )

Page 12: Kinetic Energy and Work; Potential Energy;Conservation of Energy.

Work Energy Theorem (concluded)

• Define Kinetic Energy

• Then,• Wnet = Kf - Ki

• Wnet = K

K mv12

2

Page 13: Kinetic Energy and Work; Potential Energy;Conservation of Energy.
Page 14: Kinetic Energy and Work; Potential Energy;Conservation of Energy.
Page 15: Kinetic Energy and Work; Potential Energy;Conservation of Energy.
Page 16: Kinetic Energy and Work; Potential Energy;Conservation of Energy.
Page 17: Kinetic Energy and Work; Potential Energy;Conservation of Energy.

Recall Our Discussion of the Concept of Work

cosdFWW

dF

•Work has no direction associated with it (it is a scalar).

•However, work can still be positive or negative.

•Work done by a force is positive if the force has a component (or is totally) in the direction of the displacement.

Page 18: Kinetic Energy and Work; Potential Energy;Conservation of Energy.

CONSERVATIVE FORCES•A force is conservative if the work it does on a particle that moves through a closed path is zero. Otherwise, the force is nonconservative.

•Conservative forces include: gravitational force and restoring force of spring.

• Nonconservative forces include: friction, pushes and pulls by a person .

F r d 0

Fg d

Page 19: Kinetic Energy and Work; Potential Energy;Conservation of Energy.

CONSERVATIVE FORCES

If a force is conservative, then the work it does on a particle that moves between two points is the

same for all paths connecting those points.

This is handy to know because it means that we can indirectly calculate the work

done along a complicated path by calculating the work done along a simple (for example, linear) path.

Page 20: Kinetic Energy and Work; Potential Energy;Conservation of Energy.

Work Done by Conservative Forces is

of Special Interest• The work “done” in the course of a motion, is

“undone” in if you move back.

This encourages us to define another kind of energy (as opposed to kinetic energy)- a “stored” energy associated with conservative forces.

• We call this new type of energy potential energy and define it as follows:

U = – Wc

Fg d

Page 21: Kinetic Energy and Work; Potential Energy;Conservation of Energy.

Potential Energy Associated with the Gravitational Force

ymgyymgU

dymg

dymgU

mgF

dyFU

dWU

if

y

y

y

y

y

y

y y

f

i

f

i

f

i

f

i

)(

)(

r

rsF

Page 22: Kinetic Energy and Work; Potential Energy;Conservation of Energy.

Potential Energy Associated with the Spring

Force

2212

21

2212

21

force spring

force, spring afor that deducecan weSo,

.

if

fi

kxkxU

kxkxW

We know (or should know) from our homework,

Page 23: Kinetic Energy and Work; Potential Energy;Conservation of Energy.

Tying Together What We Know about Work and

Energy U = – Wc

• Wnet = K

So, under the condition that there are only conservative forces present :

Wnet = Wc

In that case, K = – U

K + U = 0

Page 24: Kinetic Energy and Work; Potential Energy;Conservation of Energy.

The “Bottom Line”• Ei = Ef

• Ki + Ui = Kf + Uf

• The “Total Mechanical Energy” of a System is the sum of Kinetic and Potential energies. This is what

is “conserved” or constant.

Gravitational force: U= mgh Restoring force of a spring: U =1/2kx2

(KE=1/2mv2)

Page 25: Kinetic Energy and Work; Potential Energy;Conservation of Energy.

An ExampleA 70 kg skate boarder is moving at 8 m/s on flat stretch of road. If the skate boarder now encounters a hill which makes an angle of 10o with the horizontal, how much further up the road will the he be able to go without additional pushing? Ignore Friction.

Page 26: Kinetic Energy and Work; Potential Energy;Conservation of Energy.

10oh

d

KEi+Ui=KEf +Uf (only conservative forces)so

KEi + 0 = 0+Uf (Ui=0 and KEf=0)

1/2mv2 = mgh

1/2v2 = gh

h = v2/(2g) = 82/(2*9.8) = 3.26 m

h/d = Sin 10o

d = 18.8 m