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- Siyavula textbooks: grade 10
- Mechanical energy
- Conservation of energy
Potential energy
- A tennis ball, of mass
, is dropped from a height of
. Ignore air friction.
- What is the potential energy of the ball when it has fallen
?
- What is the velocity of the ball when it hits the ground?
- A bullet, mass
, is shot vertically up in the air with a muzzle velocity of
. Use the Principle of Conservation of Mechanical Energy to determine the height that the bullet will reach. Ignore air friction.
- A skier, mass
, is at the top of a
ski slope.
- Determine the maximum velocity that she can reach when she skies to the bottom of the slope.
- Do you think that she will reach this velocity? Why/Why not?
- A pendulum bob of mass
, swings from a height A to the bottom of its arc at B. The velocity of the bob at B is
. Calculate the height A from which the bob was released. Ignore the effects of air friction.
- Prove that the velocity of an object, in free fall, in a closed system, is independent of its mass.
Summary
- The potential energy of an object is the energy the object has due to his position above a reference point.
- The kinetic energy of an object is the energy the object has due to its motion.
- Mechanical energy of an object is the sum of the potential energy and kinetic energy of the object.
- The unit for energy is the joule (J).
- The Law of Conservation of Energy states that energy cannot be created or destroyed, but can only be changed from one form into another.
- The Law of Conservation of Mechanical Energy states that the total mechanical energy of an isolated system remains constant.
- The table below summarises the most important equations:
Potential Energy |
|
Kinetic Energy |
|
Mechanical Energy |
|
End of chapter exercises: gravity and mechanical energy
- Give one word/term for the following descriptions.
- The force with which the Earth attracts a body.
- The unit for energy.
- The movement of a body in the Earth's gravitational field when no other forces act on it.
- The sum of the potential and kinetic energy of a body.
- The amount of matter an object is made up of.
- Consider the situation where an apple falls from a tree. Indicate whether the following statements regarding this situation are TRUE or FALSE. Write only 'true' or 'false'. If the statement is false, write down the correct statement.
- The potential energy of the apple is a maximum when the apple lands on the ground.
- The kinetic energy remains constant throughout the motion.
- To calculate the potential energy of the apple we need the mass of the apple and the height of the tree.
- The mechanical energy is a maximum only at the beginning of the motion.
- The apple falls at an acceleration of
.
- A man fires a rock out of a slingshot directly upward. The rock has an initial velocity of
.
- What is the maximum height that the rock will reach?
- Draw graphs to show how the potential energy, kinetic energy and mechanical energy of the rock changes as it moves to its highest point.
- A metal ball of mass
is tied to a light string to make a pendulum. The ball is pulled to the side to a height (A),
above the lowest point of the swing (B). Air friction and the mass of the string can be ignored. The ball is let go to swing freely.
- Calculate the potential energy of the ball at point A.
- Calculate the kinetic energy of the ball at point B.
- What is the maximum velocity that the ball will reach during its motion?
- A truck of mass
is parked at the top of a hill,
high. The truck driver lets the truck run freely down the hill to the bottom.
- What is the maximum velocity that the truck can achieve at the bottom of the hill?
- Will the truck achieve this velocity? Why/why not?
- A stone is dropped from a window,
above the ground. The mass of the stone is
.
Use the Principle of Conservation of Energy to determine the speed with which the stone strikes the ground.
Source:
OpenStax, Siyavula textbooks: grade 10 physical science [caps]. OpenStax CNX. Sep 30, 2011 Download for free at http://cnx.org/content/col11305/1.7
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