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A system
An object or a group of objects
Kinetic energy
What is the energy associated with movement?
Elastic potential energy
What type of energy is stored in stretched objects
Nuclear energy
What type of energy is found in the nuclei of atoms?
Gravitational Potential Energy
What type of energy is found in objects raised off the ground?
Thermal energy
What type of energy is stored as heat?
Chemical energy
What type of energy is found in bonds between substances?
Joules (J)
What is the unit for energy?
G.P.E = mass x gravitational field strength x height
What is the equation to work out gravitational potential energy of an object raised off the ground?
N/m
What is spring constant (Ek) measured in?
The amount of energy required to increase the temperature of 1kg of a substance by 1 degree celsius
What is specific heat capacity?
Power
The rate at which energy is transferred or the rate at which work is done
Power = Energy transferred / time
How do you calculate power using energy transferred?
Power = work done / time
How do you calculate power using work done?
Watts (W)
What is power measured in?
1J
How much energy is transferred each second if the power is 1W?
The higher the power, the faster the object would be lifted.
If you have two motors lifting a weight to the same height but one has more power, then what will be the difference between the rate at which they are lifted?
Energy can be transferred usefully, stored or dissipated, but cannot be created or destroyed
What is the law of the conservation of energy?
Wasted energy
What do we call energy that is dissipated?
A closed system
where neither energy nor matter can enter or leave the system. This means the total energy within the system remains constant because nothing is being added or removed.
There will be no net change in the total energy
In a closed system what will happen to the total energy?
Use lubricants or insulation to reduce energy being wasted as heat
How can we reduce the amount of waste energy in a system?
The higher the conductivity, the faster the rate of conduction
How does thermal conductivity of a material affect the rate of conduction across the material?
The thicker the wall, and the lower its conductivity, the slower it will lose heat.
How does the thickness of a wall affect the rate of cooling of a building?
Efficiency
how much of the input energy a device or system uses to produce useful output energy, rather than wasted energy. It's a measure of how effectively an energy transfer or conversion is happening.
Why is efficiency important
it tells us how much useful energy is produced when an energy transfer occurs, and how much is wasted. High efficiency means more useful energy is produced, saving money and resources, while low efficiency means more energy is wasted, costing more and potentially damaging the environment.
For example, an LED light bulb is more efficient than an incandescent bulb because it uses less energy to produce the same amount of light. This means the LED bulb saves energy and money compared to the incandescent bulb.
Efficiency = Useful output energy transfer/total input energy transfer
How do you calculate efficiency using energy output?
Efficiency = useful power output/total power input
How do you calculate efficiency using power?
Renewable Energy source?
an energy source that is naturally replenished and can be used repeatedly without depleting the supply.
Non-Renewable Energy Source?
a type of energy that cannot be replenished at a rate equal to or faster than its consumption.
Fossil fuels (coal, oil and natural gas) and nuclear fuel
What are the main non-renewable energy resources on Earth?
Bio-fuel, wind, hydroelectric, geothermal, tidal, solar and wave
What are the main renewable energy resources on Earth?
Transport, electricity generation and heating
What are the main uses of energy resources?
Wind
Which energy resource depends on the wind, and is very changeable?
Solar
Which energy resource isn't great in the UK as we don't get much Sun?
Hydroelectric
Which energy resource depends on falling water in dams?
Tidal
Which energy resource depends on the movement of water as a result of the pull of the moon?
Geothermal
Which energy resource depends on the heat of the Earth?
Wave
Which energy resource depends on the sea being rough?
Bio-fuel
Which energy resource depends on organic material being burned?
They won't run out and do not release greenhouse gases
Why are renewable resources preferable to non-renewable resources?
They will run out
What is the problem with non-renewable resources?
It deals with radioactive material and if there is a meltdown then the radioactive environment is uninhabitable
What is the problem with nuclear energy?
It release huge amounts of energy
What is the good thing about nuclear energy?
They are running out and release greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide. Gases such as sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxides can also lead to acid rain.
What is the problem with fossil fuels?
The Conservation of Energy Law
Energy cannot be created or destroyed. It can only be transferred, stored or dissipated.
How is efficiency presented?
Presented as a ratio - it has no units
Work done
When a force moves an object through a distance, energy is transferred.
Power
How quickly you can transfer energy, or the rate of energy transfer
Since energy transferred and work done are the same, it can also be the rate at which work is done.
Power = Energy transferred / time
P = E/t
Kinetic Energy = 0.5 x mass x velocity squared
KE = 0.5 x m x v^2
Gravitational Potential Energy = mass x gravitational field strength x hieght
GPE = mgh