字幕列表 影片播放 列印英文字幕 Hi. It's Mr. Andersen and today I'm going to talk about potential and kinetic energy. Remember from the last podcast that energy is the ability to do work. And work is a force times times the distance. So we measure work and energy both in joules. Now there a law of the conservation of energy. In other words that law states that energy can neither be created nor destroyed. Now it can be converted into mass according to E=mc2. But we'll get to that later. And so since energy can neither be created nor destroyed, it can be converted. And so the two terms that we generally talk about when we talk about storing or using energy are potential and kinetic energy. Now I'm talking about potential gravitational energy and kinetic energy. And so we also have potential energy for example in the chemical bonds of a molecule, but I'm not talking about that. And so the two types of energy that we have are potential energy. And that's energy due to position. And kinetic energy. And that's energy due to motion. And we have equations for each of these. Potential energy is mgh, where m is mass, g is gravitational acceleration and h is the height. And then kinetic energy is one-half mv squared, where m is mass and v is the velocity of the object. Now the best place to look at how energy is converted from potential to kinetic energy is in a pendulum. A pendulum is simply a weight attached to a string. And so if I hold a pendulum at one side and don't let it go it has a certain amount of potential energy. When I let it go the pendulum will swing back and forth. That energy is converted from potential to kinetic and then back to potential energy. And then to kinetic and then potential over and over and over again. And so when that ball is sitting at the top it has all potential energy. When it's at the bottom it's converted all of that energy into energy of motion. And so when it's half way down we would say that it has a combination of potential and kinetic energy. And it's just converted. Now will a pendulum swing forever? No. Because we're going to lose a little bit of that energy in friction, in heat, in sound as it moves. And so eventually that pendulum is going to come to a stop. And so let's do a couple of problems with potential energy and kinetic energy. Potential energy remember is measured as mgh, where m is mass, g is gravitational acceleration and h is height. And so let's say for example that I climbed to the top of a ten story building. And so first of all we have to know my mass, which is 78 kilograms. We have to know the acceleration due to gravity or g which is -9.81meters per second squared. And then we have to convert that ten story building into meters. And so a ten story building is roughly 32 meters high, or that's our h value. And so if we simply multiply those all together, we get 24,485.76 joules. And if we do significant digits that's 2.4 x 10 ^4 joules of energy that my body has at the top of a building. And as long as I stay at the top of that building I can use that on the way down. I don't want to jump off the top because I don't think I would be able to make it. The next type of energy is called kinetic energy. Energy of kinetics or motion is 1/2mv^2. And so that's energy due to motion. And if I jumped off a ten story building I would convert all of that into kinetic energy at the bottom of my fall. But I don't want to do that. And so let's do one dealing with a baseball. Let's say I pitch a baseball. And there are two different pitches. When I throw a baseball I probably throw it around 20 miles per hour, if I were to throw it. I'm not a very good thrower. But a really good major league pitcher will throw it at 100 miles per hour. And so let's figure out how much kinetic energy would be in one of my throws and then those of a pitcher in the major leagues. First of all we have to figure out the mass of the baseball. The mass of a baseball is 0.145 kilograms. And since we're doing kinetic energy, the only other value that we need is the speed. And so if you throw a 20 mile per hour pitch, that's roughly 9.0 meters per second. Remember on all of these we always have to convert it to meters, or meters per second excuse me, it if's a velocity. A 100 mile per hour pitch then is roughly 45 meters per second. And so first of all let's figure out how much kinetic energy my pitch would have. A 20 mile per hour pitch. We use the equation 1/2mv^2, where m is 0.145 kilograms and v is 9.0 meters per second. We then take that times 1/2 and square the velocity and I get, using significant digits, 5.9 joules of energy. Now let's try the faster pitch. It's 100 miles per hour so that is 45 meters per second. So we're going to use 1/2mv^2. Our mass remains the same, or it's 0.145 kilograms. Except our velocity now is 45 meters per second. If I multiply that across using significant digits, I get 150 joules of energy. Again when I pitched it 20 miles per hour it was only 5.9 joules. And so even though that pitcher is throwing it 5 times as fast, he's getting roughly 25 times the amount of energy out of that pitch. And that's why if you look at the equation, the velocity being squared is super important to understand that. And so you can solve complex problems now that you know the equation for potential energy and kinetic energy. For example in class we figured out, based on the speed of a sprinter and the mass of the sprinter, you should be able to figure out how high they could pole vault if all of that kinetic energy were converted into potential energy at the height of that fall. But that's it. That's in summary again the ways that we can measure energy in joules. And it's the ability to do work. And remember it's always converted from potential or energy due to position to energy of motion or kinetic energy. I hope that's helpful.
B1 中級 勢能和動能 (Potential and Kinetic Energy) 95 16 Cheng-Hong Liu 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日 更多分享 分享 收藏 回報 影片單字