Skip to main content

All Questions

2 votes
1 answer
75 views

Gravitational collapse - proof that energy dissipation is required?

As an undergraduate, I took a short course on astrophysics, where I encountered the Jeans mass. This is the critical mass for a spherical cloud of interstellar gas above which the cloud is predicted ...
Martin Vaughan's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
80 views

Where am I wrong in proving that force perpendicular to motion increases speed and kinetic energy? [closed]

Lets think of a helicopter flying at some height $h$. It throws a food packet to a person on the ground from air. Let's neglect the air drag. The food packet is thrown only with some velocity $v_x$ in ...
Gaurav Batra's user avatar
2 votes
2 answers
111 views

Why do higher objects have a greater force?

We did an experiment in class today using a spring scale, a plastic bag, and a variety of other objects. Essentially, we attached the bag to the spring scale and measured the force, in newtons, of ...
user386598's user avatar
-2 votes
2 answers
159 views

Thought experiment: Where does potential energy come from if matter is created from energy?

Let's do a thought experiment: Assume that I have a machine that can convert energy into matter with 100% efficiency i.e. it can create any amount of matter in a small space so long as I pay it's ...
stix's user avatar
  • 121
0 votes
0 answers
71 views

Can the gravitational singularities of black holes be solved by potential or self-energy?

In Newtonian Mechanics, the energy density of gravitational field is negative in comparison with the positive energy density assigned to mass density, meaning that that the total positive energy of ...
Manuel's user avatar
  • 476
1 vote
1 answer
29 views

Describe the decrease in potential energy if two forces are acting on it one conservative which is greater than other applied by us in opposite dirn [closed]

So imagine this situation. An object is experiencing two forces, one due to gravity in downward direction and other applied by us in upward direction such that our force is less than gravitational ...
Vikas Asdev's user avatar
-1 votes
3 answers
426 views

How does gravitational potential energy work in a very large distance?

Consider a thought experiment (that I made when I was in high school) involving a universe with only two objects: a massive planet and a small asteroid. Initially, they are millions of light-years ...
pie's user avatar
  • 109
0 votes
3 answers
113 views

How does gravity do work to a horizontal projectile?

Suppose a ball is moving in a horizontal projection with some velocity $u_0$ in the positive $x$ direction. Here we see that although gravity is perpendicular to the velocity vector, it changes the ...
User13446789's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
393 views

Relationship between height and mass?

Objects with different masses are placeed on the horizontal surface of a table. The objects are then raised to different heights above the tabel. The gain in gravitational potential energy of each ...
Quin Gardiner Bax's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
336 views

How to calculate the energy in a hyperbolic orbit?

I'm recently reading a book about rocket science which involved orbital mechanics. I know that in an elliptical orbit, the energy $ E=-\frac{GMm}{2a}$, and therefore can get the vis-viva equation: $ ...
Jason Jia's user avatar
12 votes
5 answers
2k views

Why is cycling easier while standing on the pedals?

On high slopes and rugged terrains, riding a bicycle while standing on the pedals is easier. Even though I cannot physically define what is "easy"; since it is a feeling that my body ...
AlphaLife's user avatar
  • 12.5k
-1 votes
1 answer
283 views

Increase in the internal energy of the block-surface system due to friction [closed]

I found this question: https://plainmath.net/force-motion-and-energy/13968-block-dragged-horizontal-surface-acting-degree-horizontal-displaced and I'm trying to understand why he used this formula to ...
killer_toys_'s user avatar
0 votes
2 answers
55 views

Work done by gravity confusion

Say we had an object at height $h$ in a gravitational field, and of mass $m$, its GPE would equal $mgh$, now say we dropped it and it fell a distance of $h$, the work done on the object would be equal ...
Nav Bhatthal's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
48 views

$N$-body simulation: total energy is conserved, but what about the energy of a specific particle? [closed]

It is clear that the total energy in a full gravitating $N$-body simulation should be conserved, but what about the energy of an individual particle? Is this not conserved, since the potential is ...
James Thiamin's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
61 views

How to find amount of energy which goes to heat in a system of damped springs in a gravity field?

I am writing a simple computer simulation of a system (in 2 dimensions), with several circular bodies. They all affect each other by their gravity and some of them are connected via damped springs (...
Somnium's user avatar
  • 141
0 votes
2 answers
21 views

Constant energy in universe and spacecraft accelerating [duplicate]

Given that the energy in the universe is constant, how is it that spacecrafts traveling far distances sometimes get a boost by falling into the gravitational field of a planet? Acceleration caused by ...
user1's user avatar
  • 107
-1 votes
2 answers
212 views

Why does GPE convert to kinetic energy? [closed]

What is it about GPE that makes it transfer to kinetic energy, why does it do this? What is GPE?
Event-Horizon's user avatar
0 votes
2 answers
86 views

Is the topic of gravitational potential energy convoluted and unnecesary? [closed]

If we throw an object upwards from the surface of the Earth, we do some work on it to give it kinetic energy. Now as it travels up, Gravity of the Earth does negative work on it till it loses all the ...
rummy rummyrum's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
54 views

Why Gravitational Potential is same In Both these cases?

We usually choose Reference point as Infinity which is Linear to the Points and by this way we gat work done as both force and displacement are in the same direction as well as in the same line which ...
Md Faiyaz's user avatar
  • 121
0 votes
1 answer
115 views

Why does the calculus derivation for Universal Gravitational Potential Energy not follow calculus laws and become $W=GMm/r$ instead of $W=-GMm/r$? [closed]

So we know that Universal Gravitational Potential Energy is $U=-Gm1m2/r$ where $G$ is the Gravitational Constant and $r$ is the distance between centers of mass. However, the derivation has me ...
Donny Mo's user avatar
15 votes
3 answers
5k views

Is it possible to convert gravitational energy directly into electrical energy?

It is possible to produce strong gravitational accelerations on the free electrons of a conductor in order to obtain electrical current. This allows the conversion of gravitational energy directly ...
Debanjan Biswas's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
128 views

Meaning of kinetic energy and non-contact forces

My textbook gives the following physical interpretation for kinetic energy: The kinetic energy of a particle is equal to the total work that particle can do in the process of being brought to rest. ...
user avatar
2 votes
2 answers
672 views

Change in gravitational potential energy when the work is zero

I may be misunderstanding the whole concept , but my doubt is this. Let us say there is an isolated system comprising of a rock and the Earth. If I was to lift the rock up with a force equal to the ...
Ash's user avatar
  • 71
0 votes
0 answers
57 views

Confusion about an explanation for gravitational's potential energy

So we know that $\Delta U = -W$, where $\Delta U$ is the difference of potential energy and $W$ the work done by the force to move the body from point A to point B. When analyzing this for the ...
J. Doee's user avatar
  • 21
0 votes
3 answers
1k views

From where does object gains gravitational potential energy?

If an object is moving upwards with constant velocity in which upward force is supplying energy and gravity is extracting energy till height ($h$), so from where it gained potential energy? Please ...
Tushar Singh's user avatar
0 votes
2 answers
57 views

If the change in potential enegry is equal to the negative of the work done, then this principle isn't consistent here in the case freely falling body

Let us assume that a body of mass $m$ falls from height $h_1$ to $h_2$ : Here the Work done by gravitational force (Conservative force) is : $$\mathrm{Force \ ×\ Displacement} = mg \ (h_2-h_1) \tag1$$ ...
Suhas Bharadwaj's user avatar
7 votes
3 answers
1k views

How is gravitational potential energy $mgh$?

I know the derivation that $W=Fd$, hence $F=mg$ and $d=h$ so energy gained by the body is $mgh$ considering the body on the ground to have $0$ gravitational potential energy. But the definition of ...
AltercatingCurrent's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
63 views

Will a rocket need the same fuel and energy going 1 g upwards on Earth as a rocket 1 g in space?

Will the gravity of Earth change the result (making the rocket on earth need more fuel and energy than the one in space)? Or it is the same?
user avatar
1 vote
2 answers
190 views

A question on vertical spring mass systems

For a given mass attached to a vertical spring (near the surface of the earth), how do we know that the equilibrium point is halfway between its oscillation? (Let the height at the bottom of ...
Shooting Stars's user avatar
0 votes
2 answers
272 views

Limitations Of Work-Energy Theorem

Consider the given system which shows a chain $AB$ of length $l$ and the end $A$ is held at rest. Suppose we release the chain at time $t=0$. How do we find the velocity of the chain when the end $A$ ...
Pravimish's user avatar
  • 117

15 30 50 per page
1
2 3 4 5