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Potential Energy Gravitational and elastic § 7.1– 7.2

Potential Energy Gravitational and elastic § 7.1–7.2

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Page 1: Potential Energy Gravitational and elastic § 7.1–7.2

Potential Energy

Gravitational and elastic

§ 7.1–7.2

Page 2: Potential Energy Gravitational and elastic § 7.1–7.2

Potential Energy

The energy of relative position of two objects

gravity

springs

electric charges

chemical bonds

Page 3: Potential Energy Gravitational and elastic § 7.1–7.2

Potential Energy

Energy is stored doing work against a potential

Potential energy increases when “the potential” does negative (< 0 ) work

• lifting a weight

• stretching a spring

Page 4: Potential Energy Gravitational and elastic § 7.1–7.2

Gravitational Potential Energy

Gravitational potential energy =

the work to raise an object to a height

Ug = mgh

Page 5: Potential Energy Gravitational and elastic § 7.1–7.2

Elastic Potential Energy

Elastic potential energy =

the work to stretch or compress a spring

Uel = 1/2 kx2

Page 6: Potential Energy Gravitational and elastic § 7.1–7.2

Hooke’s Law Potential

Source: Young and Freedman, Figure 7.14.

Page 7: Potential Energy Gravitational and elastic § 7.1–7.2

Gravity Doing Negative Work

Source: Young and Freedman, Figure 7.2b.

Page 8: Potential Energy Gravitational and elastic § 7.1–7.2

Work from Potential Energy

When a potential does >0 work on a body:

• The body’s potential energy decreases

• The body’s kinetic energy increases

Page 9: Potential Energy Gravitational and elastic § 7.1–7.2

Poll Question

When a cute furry animal moves upward in free-fall:

A. Its gravitational potential energy increases.

B. Its kinetic energy increases.

C. Both A and B.

D. Neither A nor B.

Page 10: Potential Energy Gravitational and elastic § 7.1–7.2

Gravity Doing Positive Work

Source: Young and Freedman, Figure 7.2a.

Page 11: Potential Energy Gravitational and elastic § 7.1–7.2

Poll Question

When a disgusting slimy thing moves downward in free-fall:

A. Its gravitational potential energy increases.

B. Its kinetic energy increases.

C. Both A and B.

D. Neither A nor B.

Page 12: Potential Energy Gravitational and elastic § 7.1–7.2

Board Work Problem

A 50-g egg released from rest from the roof of a 30-m tall building falls to the ground. Its fall is observed by a student on the roof of the building, who uses coordinates with origin at the roof, and by a student on the ground, who uses coordinates with origin at the ground. What values do the two students find for:

a) Initial gravitational potential energy Ugrav 0?

b) Final gravitational potential energy Ugrav f?

c) Change in gravitational potential energy Ugrav?

d) Kinetic energy just before impact Kf?

Page 13: Potential Energy Gravitational and elastic § 7.1–7.2

Forces and potentials

The (–) spatial derivative of a potential energy function is the force from that interaction.

Fx = –dU/dx Fy = –dU/dy FZ = –dU/dz

(This is Calculus 3 stuff)

Gravity –d(mgh)/dh = –mg

Elastic –d(1/2 kx2)/dx = –kx

Page 14: Potential Energy Gravitational and elastic § 7.1–7.2

Mechanical Energy

The energy available to do work

Kinetic + potential = K + U

Page 15: Potential Energy Gravitational and elastic § 7.1–7.2

Conservation of Mechanical Energy

• If the only force doing work is gravity, mechanical energy does not change.

E1 = E2

K1 + Ug1 = K2 + Ug2

1/2 mv12 + mgy1 = 1/2 mv2

2 + mgy2