the conservation of energy principle is that energy is
always conserved
energy can be transferred usefully, stored or
dissipated but can never be created or destroyed.
when energy is transferred between stores, not all
of the energy is transferred usefully into the store
that you want it to go to. Some energy is always
dissipated when an energy transfer takes place.
dissipated energy is sometimes called
'wasted energy' because the energy is being
stored in a way that's not useful.
A mobile phone is a system. when you use the phone, energy is
usefully transferred from the chemical energy store of the battery in
the phone. but some of the this energy is dissipated to the thermal
store of the phone
energy transfers for closed systems
a cold spoon is dropped into an insulated
flask of hot soup, which is then sealed
you can assume that the flask is a perfect
thermal insulator so the spoon and the soup
form a closed system.
energy is transferred from the thermal energy store o f the soup to the useless
thermal store of the spoon (causing the soup to cool down slightly). Energy
transfers have occurred within the system, but no energy has left - so the net
change in energy is zero
power is the 'rate of doing work'
power is the rate of energy transfer or the rate of doing
work
Power is measured in watts. One watt = one joule of energy
transferred per second
EQUATION - P = E/t
Power(W) = energy transferred(J) / Time(s)
EQUATION = P = W/t
Power(W) = Work done(J) / Time(s)
A powerful machine isn't necessarily one which
can exert a strong force (although it usually ends
that way). A powerful machine is one which
transfers a lot of energy in a short space of time