Questions tagged [energy]

Energy is the conserved quantity associated to time-translation invariance and represents the work a system is capable of doing. Use this tag for questions about energy, and consider adding the [energy-conservation] tag if it is specifically about its conservation.

Energy is the conserved quantity associated to time-translation invariance by Noether's theorem.

It is usually split into (at least) two parts: Kinetic and potential energy. Kinetic energy is a measure of the "energy of motion" of particles. It can be classically defined as $\frac{1}{2}mv^2$. Potential energy is a relative concept, it is defined as the amount of work done against a conservative force to move the system from a reference state to the current state.

Conservation of energy can be derived classically from Newton's second law, $F=\frac{\mathrm{d}p}{\mathrm{d}t}$. Writing $p$ as $mv$, and writing $\frac{\mathrm{d}v}{\mathrm{d}t}$ as $v\frac{\mathrm{d}v}{\mathrm{d}x}$, and integrating, we get that $\frac{1}{2}mv^2+\int F\mathrm{d}x$ is a conserved quantity. The former term is kinetic energy, while the latter term is the potential energy, i.e. the work done by conservative forces.

By Einstein's mass-energy equivalence $E=mc^2$, all matter can be seen as a form of energy, too.

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How is it possible that combustion of coal releases similar energy as TNT explosion while intuitively we would not expect that?

According to Wikipedia, the energy released in a TNT explosion is 4 × 106 J/kg. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TNT According to web, combusion of coal is around 24 × 106…
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What is all energy made of?

I know it sounds like a weird question to ask but I find it unusual nobody has actually told me. I know what it does but not what it is... I have some kind of idea that it's actually matter and matter is energy and everything in the universe is just…
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Do we have a better understanding of what energy is since Feynman's time?

When lecturing about conservation of energy in the 1960s, Richard Feynman remarked: It is important to realize that in physics today, we have no knowledge of what energy is. We do not have a picture that energy comes in little blobs of a definite…
Tam Le
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Amount of energy required to hover.

I've noticed a motionless kingfisher over a lake looking for prey and wondered what amount of energy does a bird, weighing 0.15kg, require to hover for 15s?
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Where does the energy from a parachute go?

When a parachute slows the velocity of an object where does the energy go? If it's a falling object the acceleration from gravity is roughly constant. How does air drag "dissipate" the extra energy?
CJ Dennis
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Is ideal gas incompressible?

If so, I have read that for $C_P$ and $C_V$ for an incompressible gas are identical (in Heat Transfer by Yunus A. Cengel). Then how will the relation between $C_P$ and $C_V$ ($C_P-C_V=R$) hold for an ideal gas?
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Relatively how much energy do fluorescent light tubes take to turn on?

Fluorescent lights are already efficient when they’re running but I’ve heard that it takes a lot of energy to turn a fluorescent light tube on. So is it more efficient to turn off a fluorescent tube immediately when you’ve finished using it or is it…
Mina Rees
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Nuclear waste reclamation

Is it possible to reclaim nuclear waste from commercial reactors for useful purposes, if not necessarily energy production?
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What are the forms of energy at fundamental level?

Most high school textbooks distinguish several forms of energy. Mechanical: -Kinetic -Potential Chemical Electromagnetic Nuclear Gravitational Thermal Hydraulic Electric Mass ... This classification is probably unnecessary and arbitrary…
jinawee
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What is the abstract idea behind energy?

Many theories use something called energy to explain reason behind certain phenomenon, but I have not been able to grasp the idea of energy. Maybe it is because I have grown in a society where the word energy has a completely different meaning, I…
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Is the energy coming from sun to earth completely sent back?

So energy comes to earth from sun in the form of EM waves. Some of it is reflected back but some of it remains on earth and is used by plants to create food and some is used in the atmosphere creating storms. But how is this energy sent back to…
Ankit
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What is energy?

What exactly is energy (in terms a non-physicist/non-mathematician can understand)? I've been researching this topic, and it seems that energy is not a real physical state, i.e. it is only a scalar that is assigned to the state of physical systems…
arao6
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If energy is just a conserved quantity how can it have flux and density?

As I'm very well convinced for now, the better understanding of energy we have today in Physics is that of a conserved quantity, i.e, a numerical valued associated with a system that remains the same whatever process the system undergoes. This is…
Gold
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Is it possible to harness energy from the exothermic reaction of changes of state of matter?

Since a substance emits heat as it transitions from a high energy state (gas) to a lower energy state (solid), is it possible to devise a method to capture this heat and convert it to usable energy? I'm not sure how economical this would be, but…
Klik
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Can an Incandescent Bulb be considered as a heater?

Due to an experiment, I need a small heater (around 70 to 100 watts). I intend to use an incandescent bulb so it can act as a heater. What I wonder here is will a 70 watts Incandescent Bulb be equal to a 70 watts heater?
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