Spring 2003
Inquiry in the Natural World
Student Guide, Topic 4, What is Energy?
Topic Objectives
Wednesday’s
Reading Assignment
Trefil and Hazen, The
Sciences, 3rd Ed., Ch 3 pp. 54 to
64 and 68 to 69 and Ch 4 pp 76 to 79 and 85 to 95.
Active Learning
Exercises
1) List some forms
of energy that are not in the above list of four basic forms and identify which
of the basic forms are involved in each of the forms in your list.
2) Consider the
possibility of using water from a faucet to turn a paddle wheel, which turns a
generator that lights a lamp.
·
Explain all
the energy transformations involved.
·
Can you see
why this is not a source of "free" energy?
3) Give some
examples, other than those on p. 92 of the text, of things, which would look
silly when running a film or videotape
in reverse.
Reading for
Friday
Chapter 1 of:
P.W.Atkins, The Second Law, New York: Freeman 1984
http://web.sbu.edu/physics/faculty/dimattio/Clare102/physics.dimattio-sp03.htm
Questions for
Discussion
it influence the work of Lord Kelvin?
Give
some examples.
Mechanics
Conservation of
Momentum
Total momentum of an isolated
system is a constant.
Recall: force = D(mv)/
D(t)
·
final momentum
- initial momentum = force X time
Conservation of
Energy
Total energy of an isolated
system is a constant.
But: final energy - initial energy =
work
Or: work = change in energy
Note:
Total energy of the universe is conserved.
Note:
Friction dissipates energy and thus decreases the
kinetic energy of a moving body doing
negative work.
Basic Forms of
Energy
(1) kinetic - energy a body has by virtue of
its motion
(2) potential - energy a body has by virtue
of its position
(3) electromagnetic - energy carried by
electromagnetic
radiation
(4) mass - energy a body has by virtue of
its mass (E = mc2)
Examples of
non-basic forms:
mechanical energy - sum of kinetic and
potential
thermal energy (or internal energy)
-
microscopic mechanical energy of the particles in a body
Thermodynamics
Heat (Q) - energy exchanged between two bodies
due to a
difference in temperature.
Internal Energy (U) - microscopic kinetic and potential
energies
in the body.
Laws of
Thermodynamics:
First Law: Change in internal energy =
heat + work
Or: Uf - Ui
= Q + W
Note: Q is energy in transit not the
energy in the body. U
is the thermal energy of the body.
Second law:
Kelvin
Statement - There is no perfect heat engine;
i.e., no cyclic device can
completely convert
heat into work,
Clausius
Statement - There is no perfect refrigerator;
i.e., no cyclic device which transfers
heat from a
cold reservoir to a hot reservior
without work being
done on it.
Entropy
Statement - Total entropy of an isolated
system can not decrease.
Note: 1st law is a statement of
conservation of energy.
Note: entropy is a measure of disorder
or an arrow which
points in the direction of spontaneous processes.