This module explains potential energy in a format that is accessible to blind sudents.
Table of contents
Preface
General
This module is part of a
book
(or collection) designed to make physics concepts accessible to blind
students. The collection is intended to supplement but not to replace thetextbook in an introductory course in high school or college physics.
This module explains potential energy in a format that is accessible to
blind sudents.
Prerequisites
In addition to an Internet connection and a browser, you will need the
following tools (as a minimum) to work through the exercises in these modules:
- A graph board for plotting graphs and vector diagrams (
(External Link) ).
- A protractor for measuring angles (
(External Link) ).
- An audio screen reader that is compatible with your operating system,
such as the NonVisual Desktop Access program (NVDA), which is freelyavailable at
(External Link) .
- A refreshable Braille display capable of providing a line by line tactile output of information displayed on the computer monitor
(
(External Link) ).
- A device to create Braille labels. Will be used to label graphs
constructed on the graph board.
The minimum prerequisites for understanding the material in these modules
include:
- A good understanding of algebra.
- An understanding of the use of a graph board for plotting graphs and
vector diagrams (
(External Link) ).
- An understanding of the use of a protractor for measuring angles (
(External Link) ).
- A basic understanding of the use of sine, cosine, and tangent from
trigonometry (
(External Link) ).
- An introductory understanding of JavaScript programming (
(External Link) and
(External Link) ).
- An understanding of all of the material covered in the earlier modules
in this collection.
Supplemental material
I recommend that you also study the other lessons in my extensive collection
of online programming tutorials. You will find a consolidated index at
www.DickBaldwin.com .
I will begin this explanation with a couple of graphic examples.
Graphic examples of potential
energy
Gravitational potential energy
If you find a flat rock with a mass of 10 kg on the ground at a location on
the surface of the earth where the ground is flat for miles around, that rockhas little or no potential energy.
A change in potential energy
If you pick that rock up and balance it on a limb of a tree that is 2 meters
off the ground, you have done at least two things:
- You have done work on the rock by exerting a force on the rock that
displaced it upward by 2 meters. With some simplifying assumptions, we cancalculate that you have done 196.2 joules of work on the rock.
- You have caused the rock to have gravitational potential energy that it
did not have in its earlier position on the ground.