Utilisateur
an object or a group of objects; if anything changes in a system, energy is transferred between its stores or to the surroundings
where no energy can escape to or enter and the total energy never changes
- kinetic energy
- gravitational potential energy
- elastic potential energy
- thermal/internal energy
- chemical energy
- nuclear energy
- magnetic energy
- electrostatic energy
the energy an object has because its moving
the energy an object has because of its height above the ground
energy an elastic object has when its stretched or compressed
energy an object has because of its temperature [the total kinetic and potential energy of the particles in the object]
energy that can be transferred by chemical reactions
energy stored in the nucleus of an atom
the energy a magnetic object has when its near a magnet or magnetic field
the energy a charged object has when its near another charged object
- heating
- waves
- electricity
- forces
it is transferred from one object to another that has a lower temperature
waves can transfer energy through radiation
energy is transferred when an electric current flows
energy is transferred when a force moves or changes the shape of an object
- the thicknessof the walls and roof
- the thermal conductivity of the walls and roof [the lower the thermal conductivity, the lower the rate of heat loss]
by using thermal insulation; a material that has low thermal conductivity because the rate of energy transfer through an insulator is low
- the material's thermal conductivity
- thickness of material
- temperature difference of the two sides of the material
mass x gravitational field strength x height
0.5 x mass x speed^2
energy transferred or work done / time
how much work is done; amount of energy transferred per second
0.5 x spring constant x extention^2
no, it cannot be destroyed or created; it can only be stored/transferred/dissipated [wasted]
no, it is never entirely transferred usefully; some energy is always dissipated
it eventually ends up being transferred to the thermal energy store of its surroundings
a way of reducing unwanted energy transfer due to friction
a way of reducing energy wasted due to air resistance or drag in water
useful output energy transfer/total input energy transfer
a measure of how much energy is transferred usefully
Place a beaker on a balance and press 0
Add oil to the beaker and record the mass of oil
Place a thermometer and immersion heater in the oil
Read the starting temperature of the oil
Wrap the beaker in insulating foam to reduce thermal energy transfer to the surroundings
Connect a joulemeter to the immersion meter
Time for 30 minutes
Read the number of joules of energy that passed into the immersion heater
Read the final temperature of the oil
Calculate the specific heat capacity
the amount of energy required to raise the temperature of 1kg of a substance by 1*c
change in thermal energy / mass x temperature change
- heating
- generating electricity
- transport
fossil fuels:
- oil
- natural gas
- coal
energy resources that:
- will eventually run out
- are not replaced as fast as theyre used
- coal
- oil
- natural gas
- nuclear fission
generating electricity
extracted from underground
- enough available to meet current demands
- reliable; supply can be controlled to meet demands
- relatively cheap to extract and use
- will eventually run out
- releases carbon dioxide when burned [climate change]
- releases other gases such as sulfur dioxide
- oil spills into the oceans killing marine life
- generating electricity
- heating
- transport
extracted from underground
- enough available to meet currrent demands
- reliable; supply can be controlled to meet current demands
- relatively cheap to extract and use
- will eventually run out
-releases carbon dioxide when burned [climate change]
- releases other gases such as sulfur dioxide
- oil spills into the oceans killing marine life
- generating electricity
- heating
extracted from underground
- enough available to meet current demands
- reliable; supply can be controlled to meet current demands
- relatively cheap to extract and use
- will eventually run out
- releases carbon dioxide when burned [climate change]
- releases other gases such as sulfur dioxide