Physics 111: Mechanics: Dale Gary
Physics 111: Mechanics: Dale Gary
Lecture 6
Dale Gary
NJIT Physics Department
Energy
Energy and Mechanical Energy
Work
Kinetic Energy
Work and Kinetic Energy
The Scalar Product of Two Vectors
January 5, 2019
Why Energy?
Why do we need a concept of energy?
The energy approach to describing motion is
particularly useful when Newton’s Laws are
difficult or impossible to use
Energy is a scalar quantity. It does not have a
direction associated with it
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What is Energy?
Energy is a property of the state of a system,
not a property of individual objects: we have to
broaden our view.
Some forms of energy:
Mechanical:
Kinetic energy (associated with motion, within system)
Potential energy (associated with position, within system)
Chemical
Electromagnetic
Nuclear
Energy is conserved. It can be transferred from
one object to another or change in form, but
cannot be created or destroyed
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Kinetic Energy
Kinetic Energy is energy associated with the
state of motion of an object
For an object moving with a speed of v
1 2
KE mv
2
SI unit: joule (J)
1 joule = 1 J = 1 kg m2/s2
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1 2
Why KE mv ?
2
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Work W
1 2 1
mv mv0 Fx x
2
Start with
2 2 Work “W”
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Definition of Work W
The work, W, done by a constant force on an
object is defined as the product of the component
of the force along the direction of displacement
and the magnitude of the displacement
W ( F cos q )x
F is the magnitude of the force
Δ x is the magnitude of the
object’s displacement
q is the angle between F and x
January 5, 2019
Work Unit
This gives no information about
the time it took for the displacement to occur
the velocity or acceleration of the object
Work is a scalar quantity
SI Unit
1 2 1
mv mv0 ( F cos q )x
2
2 2
Newton • meter = Joule
N•m=J
J = kg • m2 / s2 = ( kg • m / s2 ) • m
W ( F cos q )x
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Work: + or -?
Work can be positive, negative, or zero. The
sign of the work depends on the direction of
the force relative to the displacement
W ( F cos q )x
Work positive: W > 0 if 90°> q > 0°
Work negative: W < 0 if 180°> q > 90°
Work zero: W = 0 if q = 90°
Work maximum if q = 0°
Work minimum if q = 180°
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Example: When Work is Zero
A man carries a bucket of water
horizontally at constant velocity.
The force does no work on the
bucket
Displacement is horizontal
Force is vertical
cos 90° = 0
W ( F cos q )x
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Example: Work Can Be
Positive or Negative
Work is positive when lifting
the box
Work would be negative if
lowering the box
The force would still be upward,
but the displacement would be
downward
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Work Done by a Constant Force
The work W done on a system by
an agent exerting a constant force F
on the system is the product of
F r
the magnitude F of the force, the
magnitude Δr of the displacement r
of the point of application of the I II
force, and cosθ, where θ is the
angle between the force and WI 0 WII Fr
displacement vectors:
F
W F r Fr cosq F
r r
III IV
WIII Fr WIV Fr cos q
January 5, 2019
Work and Force
An Eskimo pulls a sled as shown. The total mass
of the sled is 50.0 kg, and he exerts a force of
1.20 × 102 N on the sled by pulling on the rope.
How much work does he do on the sled if θ =
30°and he pulls the sled 5.0 m ?
W ( F cos q )x
(1.20 10 2 N )(cos 30 )(5.0m)
5.2 10 2 J
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Work Done by Multiple Forces
If more than one force acts on an object, then
the total work is equal to the algebraic sum of
the work done by the individual forces
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Work and Multiple Forces
Suppose µk = 0.200, How much work done on
the sled by friction, and the net work if θ = 30°
and he pulls the sled 5.0 m ?
Fnet , y N mg F sin q 0
N mg F sin q
1 2 1
mv mv0 Fnet x
2
2 2
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Work and Kinetic Energy
(a) We know v0 35.0m / s, v 0, m 1.00 10 kg, f k 8.00 10 N
3 3
Find the minimum necessary stopping distance
1 2 1 2
Wnet W fric Wg WN W fric mv f mvi
2 2
1 2
f k x 0 mv0
2
1
(8.00 10 N )x (1.00 103 kg)(35.0m / s) 2
3
2
x 76.6m
January 5, 2019
Work and Kinetic Energy
(b) We know x 30.0m, v0 35.0m / s, m 1.00 103 kg, f k 8.00 103 N
Find the speed at impact.
Write down the work-energy theorem:
1 1
Wnet W fric f k x mv2f mvi2
2 2
2
v 2f v02 f k x
m
2
v 2f (35m / s) 2 ( )(8.00 10 3
N )( 30 m) 745m 2
/ s 2
1.00 103 kg
v f 27.3m / s
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Work Done By a Spring
Spring force
Fx kx
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Spring at Equilibrium
F =0
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Spring Compressed
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xf
lim Fx x Fx dx
xf
x 0 xi
xi
xf xf
W Fx dx kx dx
xi xi
0
kx dx 12 kx 2
xmax
xf
W kx dx 12 kxi2 12 kx 2f
xi
Work done by
spring on block
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Projection of a Vector: Dot Product
The dot product says
something about how parallel iˆ ˆj 0; iˆ kˆ 0; ˆj kˆ 0
two vectors are.
The dot product (scalar
iˆ iˆ 1; ˆj ˆj 1; kˆ kˆ 1
product) of two vectors can be
thought of as the projection of
one onto the direction of the
other. B Projection is zero
A B AB cos q
A iˆ A cos q Ax
Components p/2
A B Ax Bx Ay By Az Bz A
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Derivation
How do we show that B Ax Bx Ay By Az Bz ?
A
Start with A A iˆ A ˆj A kˆ
x y z
B Bxiˆ By ˆj Bz kˆ
Then A B ( A iˆ A ˆj A kˆ) ( B iˆ B ˆj B kˆ)
x y z x y z
But iˆ ˆj 0; iˆ kˆ 0; ˆj kˆ 0
iˆ iˆ 1; ˆj ˆj 1; kˆ kˆ 1
So A B Axiˆ Bxiˆ Ay ˆj By ˆj Az kˆ Bz kˆ
Ax Bx Ay By Az Bz
January 5, 2019
Scalar Product
The vectors A 2iˆ 3 ˆj and B iˆ 2 ˆj
Determine the scalar product A B ?
A B Ax Bx Ay By 2 (-1) 3 2 -2 6 4
Find the angle θ between these two vectors