a constant speed has no acceleration. When the
velocity of an object increases by the same amount
each second or minute, you have uniform
acceleration. Uniform deceleration is when the
decrease in velocity is the same each second or
minute.
MASS, WEIGHT, FORCE,
AND INERTIA
Very few terms are used in physics with greater
frequency and assurance than mass, and few are
more difficult to define. Mass is often confused
with weight. This is a mistake not helped since
the unit of measurement for both mass and weight
is the gram. The MASS of an object is the
quantity of matter that the object contains.
The WEIGHT of the object is equal to the
gravitational force with which the object is
attracted to the earth. FORCE is what makes an
object start to move, speed up, slow down, or
keep moving against resistance. Force may be
either a push or a pull. You exert a force when
you push against a truck, whether you move the
truck or only try to move it. You also exert a force
when you pull on a heavy piano, whether you
move the piano or only try to move it. Forces can
produce or prevent motion.
A tendency to prevent motion is the frictional
resistance offered by an object. This frictional
resistance is called frictional force. While it can
never cause an object to move, it can check or
stop motion. Frictional force wastes power,
creates heat, and causes wear. Although frictional
force cannot be entirely eliminated, it can be
reduced with lubricants.
INERTIA is the property that causes objects
at rest to remain at rest and objects in motion to
remain in motion until acted upon by an outside
force. An example of inertia is one body that has
twice as much mass as another body of the same
material offering twice as much force in
opposition to the same acceleration rate.
Inertia in a body depends on its motion. The
physical principles of mass and inertia are
involved in the design and operation of the heavy
machinery that is to be placed into motion, such
as an engines flywheel and various gears that are
at work in the ships engineering plant. The great
mass of the flywheel tends to keep it rotating once
it has been set in motion. The high inertia of the
flywheel keeps it from responding to small
fluctuations in speed and thus helps keep the
engine running smoothly.
ENERGY
Can you define energy? Although everyone
has a general idea of the meaning of energy, a
good definition is hard to find. Most commonly,
perhaps, energy is defined as the capacity for
doing work. This is not a very complete
definition. Energy can produce other effects which
cannot possibly be considered work. For example,
heat can flow from one object to another without
doing work; yet heat is a form of energy, and the
process of heat transfer is a process that produces
an effect. A better definition of energy, therefore,
states that energy is the capacity for producing
an effect.
Energy exists in many forms. For convenience,
we usually classify energy according to the size
and nature of the bodies or particles with which
it is associated. Thus we say that MECHANICAL
ENERGY is the energy associated with large
bodies or objectsusually, things that are big
enough to see. THERMAL ENERGY is energy
associated with molecules. CHEMICAL ENERGY
is energy that arises from the forces that bind the
atoms together in a molecule. Chemical energy
is demonstrated whenever combustion or any
other chemical reaction takes place. Electrical
energy (light, X rays, and radio waves) is
associated with particles that are even smaller than
atoms.
Mechanical energy, thermal energy, and
chemical energy must also be classified as being
either stored energy or energy in transition.
STORED ENERGY can be thought of as
energy that is actually contained in or stored in
a substance or system. There are two kinds of
stored energy: (1) potential energy and (2) kinetic
energy. When energy is stored in a substance or
system because of the relative POSITIONS of two
or more objects or particles, we call it potential
energy. When energy is stored in a substance or
system because of the relative VELOCITIES of
two or more objects or particles, we call it kinetic
energy.
Mechanical energy in transition is called work.
Thermal energy in transition is called heat. In the
next section we will discuss mechanical and
thermal energy and energy transformations.
If you do not completely understand this
classification, come back to it from time to
time as you read the following sections on
mechanical energy and thermal energy. The
examples and discussion given in the following
sections will probably help you understand this
classification.
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