Questions tagged [energy-conservation]

The law of conservation of energy, which states that the amount of energy in a system is constant. For questions about Earth's environment, see the climate-science tag instead.

The conservation of energy is a fundamental concept of physics along with the conservation of mass and the conservation of momentum. Within some problem domain, the amount of energy remains constant and energy is neither created nor destroyed. Energy can be converted from one form to another (potential energy can be converted to kinetic energy) but the total energy within the domain remains fixed.
If you take all forms of energy into account, the total energy of an isolated system always remains constant. All the forms of energy follow the law of conservation of energy.

The amount of energy in any system, then, is determined by the following equation:$$U_T=U_i+W+Q$$ $U_T~:$ the total internal energy of a system.
$U_i~~:$ the initial internal energy of a system.
$W~~:$ the work done by or on the system.
$Q~~~:$ the heat added to, or removed from, the system.
It is also possible to determine the change in internal energy of the system using the equation: $~ΔU=W+Q~.$

The law of conservation of energy states that the amount of energy in a system is constant. For questions about Earth's environment, see the tag instead.

Conservation of energy is linked to time-independence by , as how momentum conservation is linked to spatial-independence by the same theorem.

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Is energy really conserved?

In high school I was taught energy was conserved. Then I learned that nuclear reactions allow energy to be converted into mass. Then I also heard that apparently energy can spontaneously appear in quantum mechanics. So, are there any other caveats…
Casebash
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Can we create and destroy energy simultaneously at different points in a space?

Can we create an amount of energy at a point in space and destroy an equal amount of energy at another point in space, with both the processes occurring simultaneously? This will not violate energy conservation, as the total energy in the universe…
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What happens to the potential energy of a compressed spring when it dissolves in acid?

Suppose we take a spring and compress it in a clamp. There is a potential energy due to the compression of the spring. It is now placed into a bath of acid that will dissolve the spring but not the clamp. What happens to the potential energy? In a…
Folau
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What is going on with star's energy?

The sun radiates $3.8 × 10^{26} J$ energy each second, this energy is absorbed by various celestial objects but most of it is reflected or emitted back in the space, similarly there must be energy pouring into empty space from various star systems,…
Rijul Gupta
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Has the spontaneous forming of matter been observed?

If I understood the accepted answer here correctly,then matter can spontaneously form. But has this ever been observed?
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What energy is decreasing in order to hold conservation of energy in the below mentioned case?

There is a ball and a beaker. The beaker is filled with a liquid which has higher density than that of the ball. By the help of some mechanical force the ball is inserted inside the liquid and is made to touch the bottom of the beaker. Then the…
Tank
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On energy conservation

According to conservation of energy,energy can neither be created nor be destroyed then where did the energy come from? Because there is no creation of energy we can't create
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A confusion regarding a paragraph in The Feynman Lectures

Under the chapter entitled Conservation of energy, under the section of Gravitational potential energy, there is this following paragraph : A very simple weight-lifting machine is shown in Fig. 4–1. This machine lifts weights three units “strong.”…
Omar Nagib
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conversion of information to energy

Possible Duplicate: Maxwell's Demon Constant (information-energy equivalence) I was reading: Demonic device converts information to energy : Experiment inspired by a paradox tempts a bead uphill. Its good to see conservation of energy is…
claws
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Bungee jumper and conservation of energy

A bungee jumper of mass $75 kg$ is standing on a platform $53 m$ above a river. The length of the upstretched bungee cord is 11m. The spring constant is $65.6 N/m$. Calculate the jumper's speed at $19 m$ below the platform on his first fall. I'm…
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Misunderstanding these particular energy transfers

Given 2 identical iron bars “A” and “B” in deep space. At some distance from them are 2 coils. “A” is moving with constant velocity “V”, “B” stands. Same currents pass through the coils separately, creating same magnetic fields. They pull the bars.…
user223571
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How do I derive the angular frequency of a simple pendulum through conservation of energy?

Is it possible? I'm not exactly sure what I'm doing wrong. So far I've gotten: $mgl(1-$cos$\theta) = \frac12\omega^2l^2$ Which then gives $\omega = \sqrt\frac{2g(1-cos\theta)}{l}$ which is incorrect. Where am I going wrong??
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Why energy plays such an important role among other conservative quantities

I was reading books where I realized an interesting thing: In quantum, the evoluation of states/wave funciton is governed by hamiltonina operator $H$, which is bascially the energy operator. In special and general relativity, the most important…
J C
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I can't understand why Y can not be higher than X in this following explanation of Richard Feynman in his lecture

We suppose, however, that there is such a thing—a reversible machine—which lowers one unit of weight (a pound or any other unit) by one unit of distance, and at the same time lifts a three-unit weight. Call this reversible machine, Machine A.…
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Conservation of energy for a hovering helicopter

Generally engines turn the chemical energy in fuel to kinetic energy, in a helicopter that kinetic is turned into gravitational potential energy when it goes up. Now let's imagine a helicopter hovering above the ground at a fixed height. To stay…
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