Work and Energy

Work and Energy: Potential and Kinetic Energy

Work and Energy: Potential and Kinetic Energy

Demonstrating the Conversion of Potential Energy into Kinetic Energy

Explore the fundamental concepts of potential and kinetic energy through interactive experiments. Observe how energy transforms from one form to another while the total mechanical energy remains conserved.

Help & Instructions

How to Use This Learning Tool:
  1. Pendulum Experiment: Observe energy conversion in a swinging pendulum
  2. Ramp Experiment: Watch potential energy convert to kinetic energy as a ball rolls down a ramp
  3. Adjust parameters like height and mass to see how they affect energy
  4. Monitor the energy bar to see the conservation of mechanical energy
  5. Use the reset button to restart experiments
Learning Objectives:
  • Understand the concepts of potential and kinetic energy
  • Observe energy conversion in real-time
  • Learn about the conservation of mechanical energy
  • Explore how mass and height affect potential energy
  • Understand how velocity affects kinetic energy

Experiment 1: The Swinging Pendulum

Observe how potential energy converts to kinetic energy and back again in a swinging pendulum.

Potential Energy
9.8 J
Kinetic Energy
0.0 J
Total Energy
9.8 J
Height
1.0 m
PE: 9.8 J
KE: 0.0 J

Experiment 2: The Rolling Ball Ramp

Watch potential energy convert to kinetic energy as a ball rolls down a ramp.

Initial PE
19.6 J
Final KE
19.6 J
Ball Velocity
6.3 m/s
Ramp Height
2.0 m
PE: 19.6 J
KE: 0.0 J
Understanding Energy Conversion:

Energy can neither be created nor destroyed, only converted from one form to another. In these experiments, we observe gravitational potential energy converting to kinetic energy and vice versa, while the total mechanical energy remains constant (ignoring friction and air resistance).

The Physics of Work and Energy

Key Concepts:

Potential Energy (PE) is stored energy due to position:

  • Gravitational PE = m × g × h (mass × gravity × height)
  • Measured in Joules (J)
  • Increases with height and mass

Kinetic Energy (KE) is energy of motion:

  • Kinetic Energy = ½ × m × v² (half × mass × velocity squared)
  • Measured in Joules (J)
  • Increases with mass and velocity squared
Conservation of Mechanical Energy:

In isolated systems with only conservative forces:

  • Total Mechanical Energy = Potential Energy + Kinetic Energy
  • PE + KE = Constant (ignoring non-conservative forces like friction)
  • When PE decreases, KE increases by the same amount
  • When KE decreases, PE increases by the same amount
Real-world Applications:

Understanding energy conversion is essential in:

  • Roller coasters (potential to kinetic energy conversion)
  • Hydroelectric dams (water's potential energy to electrical energy)
  • Pendulum clocks (regular energy conversion for timekeeping)
  • Sports (converting body's chemical energy to kinetic energy)

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