Title: Chapter 8. Potential Energy and Energy Conservation
1Chapter 8. Potential Energy and Energy
Conservation
- 8.1. What is Physics?     Â
- 8.2. Work and Potential Energy     Â
- 8.3. Path Independence of Conservative
Forces      - 8.4. Determining Potential Energy Values    Â
-  8.5. Conservation of Mechanical Energy     Â
- 8.6. Reading a Potential Energy Curve    Â
- Â 8.7. Work Done on a System by an External
Force      - 8.8. Conservation of Energy
2Introduction
- In Chapter 7 we introduced the concepts of work
and kinetic energy. We then derived a net
work-kinetic energy theorem to describe what
happens to the kinetic energy of a single rigid
object when work is done on it. In this chapter
we will consider a systems composed of several
objects that interact with one another.
3What is Physics?Â
- (1) The system consists of an Earthbarbell
system that has its arrangement changed when a
weight lifter (outside of the system) pulls the
barbell and the Earth apart by pulling up on the
barbell with his arms and pushing down on the
Earth with his feet
(2) The system consists of two crates and a
floor. This system is rearranged by a person
(again, outside the system) who pushes the crates
apart by pushing on one crate with her back and
the other with her feet
There is an obvious difference between these two
situations. The work the weight lifter did has
been stored in the new configuration of the
Earth-barbell system, and the work done by the
woman separating the crates seem to be lost
rather than stored away.
4- How do we determine whether the work done by a
particular type of force is stored or used
up.?
5The Path Independence Test for a Gravitational
Force
- The net work done on the skier as she travels
down the ramp is given by
It does not depend on the shape of the ramp but
only on the vertical component of the
gravitational force and the initial and final
positions of her center of mass.
6Path Dependence of Work Done by a Friction Force
- The work done by friction along that path 1?2 is
given by
- The work done by the friction force along path
1?4?3?2 is given by
7Conservative Forces and Path Independence
- conservative forces are the forces that do path
independent work - Non-conservative forces are the forces that do
path dependent work
8The work done by a conservative force along any
closed path is zero.
9- Test of a System's Ability to Store Work Done
by Internal Forces the work done by a
conservative internal force can be stored in the
system as potential energy, and the work done by
a non-conservative internal force will be used
up
10EXAMPLE 1Â Cheese on a Track
- Figure a shows a 2.0 kg block of slippery
cheese that slides along a frictionless track
from point 1 to point 2. The cheese travels
through a total distance of 2.0 m along the
track, and a net vertical distance of 0.80 m. How
much work is done on the cheese by the
gravitational force during the slide?
11Determining Potential Energy Values
- Consider a particle-like object that is part
of a system in which a conservative force acts.
When that force does work W on the object,
the change in the potential energy associated
with the system is the negative of the work done
12Gravitational Potential Energy
13GRAVITATIONAL POTENTIAL ENERGY
- The gravitational potential energy U is the
energy that an object of mass m has by virtue of
its position relative to the surface of the
earth. That position is measured by the height h
of the object relative to an arbitrary zero
level - SI Unit of Gravitational Potential Energy joule
(J)
14Elastic Potential Energy
                                                                                                                                                      Â
or
- we choose the reference configuration to be
when the spring is at its relaxed length and the
block is at .
15Sample Problem 2
- A 2.0 kg sloth hangs 5.0 m above the ground
(Fig. 8-6). - a) What is the gravitational potential energy U
of the slothEarth system if we take the
reference point y0 to be (1) at the ground, (2)
at a balcony floor that is 3.0 m above the
ground, (3) at the limb, and (4) 1.0 m above the
limb? Take the gravitational potential energy to
be zero at y0. - (b) The sloth drops to the ground. For each
choice of reference point, what is the change
in the potential energy of the slothEarth system
due to the fall?
16What is mechanical energy of a system?
- The mechanical energy is the sum of kinetic
energy and potential energies
For example,
17Conservation of Mechanical Energy
- In a system where (1) no work is done on it by
external forces and (2) only conservative
internal forces act on the system elements, then
the internal forces in the system can cause
energy to be transferred between kinetic energy
and potential energy, but their sum, the
mechanical energy Emec of the system, cannot
change.
An isolated system is a system that there is no
net work is done on the system by external forces.
18Example 3
19Check Your UnderstandingÂ
- Some of the following situations are consistent
with the principle of conservation of mechanical
energy, and some are not. Which ones are
consistent with the principle? - (a) An object moves uphill with an increasing
speed. - (b) An object moves uphill with a decreasing
speed. - (c) An object moves uphill with a constant speed.
- (d) An object moves downhill with an increasing
speed. - (e) An object moves downhill with a decreasing
speed. - (f) An object moves downhill with a constant
speed.
20Example 4  A Daredevil Motorcyclist
- A motorcyclist is trying to leap across the
canyon shown in Figure by driving horizontally
off the cliff at a speed of 38.0 m/s. Ignoring
air resistance, find the speed with which the
cycle strikes the ground on the other side.
21EXAMPLE 5Â Bungee Jumper
- A 61.0 kg bungee-cord jumper is on a bridge
45.0 m above a river. The elastic bungee cord has
a relaxed length of LÂ Â 25.0 m. Assume that the
cord obeys Hooke's law, with a spring constant of
160 N/m. If the jumper stops before reaching the
water, what is the height h of her feet above the
water at her lowest point?
22EXAMPLE 6
- In Fig., a 2.0 kg package of tamales slides along
a floor with speed v14.0 m/s. It then runs into
and compresses a spring, until the package
momentarily stops. Its path to the initially
relaxed spring is frictionless, but as it
compresses the spring, a kinetic frictional force
from the floor, of magnitude 15 N, acts on it.
The spring constant is 10Â 000 N/m. By what
distance d is the spring compressed when the
package stops?
23Net Work on a system
24Internal Work on a single rigid object
25Internal Work on a system
Since Newton's Third Law tells us that
the internal work is given by the integral of y
the internal work on a system is not zero in
general
26Work-Energy Theorem
27Example 7  Fireworks
- A 0.20-kg rocket in a fireworks display is
launched from rest and follows an erratic flight
path to reach the point P, as Figure shows. Point
P is 29 m above the starting point. In the
process, 425 J of work is done on the rocket by
the nonconservative force generated by the
burning propellant. Ignoring air resistance and
the mass lost due to the burning propellant, find
the speed vf of the rocket at the point P.
28Reading a Potential Energy Curve
29Finding the Force Analytically
Solving for F(x) and passing to the differential
limit yield
30Reading a Potential Energy Curve
- Turning Points a place where K0 (because UE
) and the particle changes direction. - Neutral equilibrium the place where the particle
has no kinetic energy and no force acts on it,
and so it must be stationary. - unstable equilibrium a point at which . If the
particle is located exactly there, the force on
it is also zero, and the particle remains
stationary. However, if it is displaced even
slightly in either direction, a nonzero force
pushes it farther in the same direction, and the
particle continues to move - stable equilibrium a point where a particle
cannot move left or right on its own because to
do so would require a negative kinetic energy
31Sample Problem
- A 2.00 kg particle moves along an x axis in
one-dimensional motion while a conservative force
along that axis acts on it. The potential energy
U(x) associated with the force is plotted in Fig.
8-10a. That is, if the particle were placed at
any position between x0 and x7m , it would
have the plotted value of U. At x6.5m , the
particle has velocity v0(-4.0m/s)i . (a)
determine the particles speed at x14.5m. (b)
Where is the particles turning point located?
(c) Evaluate the force acting on the particle
when it is in the region 1.9mltxlt4.0m.
32General Energy Conservation
For a isolated system where Wext is zero, it
energy is conserved.
- THE PRINCIPLE OF CONSERVATION OF ENERGY Energy
can neither be created nor destroyed, but can
only be converted from one form to another.
33Example
- Â In Fig. 8-58, a block slides along a path
that is without friction until the block reaches
the section of length L0.75m, which begins at
height h2.0m on a ramp of angle ?30o . In
that section, the coefficient of kinetic friction
is 0.40. The block passes through point A with a
speed of 8.0 m/s. If the block can reach point B
(where the friction ends), what is its speed
there, and if it cannot, what is its greatest
height above A?