GCSE Physics

Physics

Conduction of Heat

Conduction of Heat

Understanding how thermal energy transfers through materials without the material itself moving

Heat Transfer through Solids

What is Conduction?

Particle Vibration

Heat conduction occurs when vibrating particles pass their kinetic energy to neighboring particles.

Energy Transfer

Thermal energy moves from the hotter end to the colder end of an object.

Temperature Gradient

The greater the temperature difference, the faster the rate of conduction.

Key Concept

Conduction is the main method of heat transfer in solids. In metals, free electrons also help transfer heat very efficiently.

Particle Model of Conduction

How Heat Travels Through Materials

Cold End

1
2
3
4
5

Particles vibrate slowly

Heat Source →

1
2
3
4
5

Particles vibrate rapidly

Energy transfers from hot to cold as vibrating particles collide with their neighbors

Good vs Poor Conductors

Good Conductors

Materials that transfer heat quickly:

  • Silver - Best conductor
  • Copper - Used in pans
  • Aluminum - Cooking foil
  • Iron - Radiators

High Thermal Conductivity

Poor Conductors (Insulators)

Materials that transfer heat slowly:

  • Wood - Handles
  • Plastic - Coatings
  • Glass - Windows
  • Air - Trapped in insulation

Low Thermal Conductivity

Why are metals good conductors?

Metals have free electrons that can move through the metal and transfer kinetic energy quickly from the hot end to the cold end. This makes them much better conductors than non-metals.

Thermal Conductivity Values

Material Thermal Conductivity (W/mK) Type Common Use
Silver 429 Excellent Conductor Electronics
Copper 401 Excellent Conductor Cooking pans, wires
Aluminum 237 Good Conductor Foil, pans
Iron 80 Moderate Conductor Radiators
Glass 0.8 Poor Conductor Windows
Wood 0.15 Insulator Handles, furniture
Air 0.024 Excellent Insulator Double glazing

Higher values mean better conduction of heat

Interactive Conduction Experiment

See how different materials conduct heat at different rates:

20°C
20°C
20°C
20°C
50%

Observations:

Copper
Heats fastest
Iron
Heats quickly
Glass
Heats slowly
Wood
Heats very slowly

Factors Affecting Conduction

Temperature Difference

Greater temperature difference = faster heat transfer

Cross-sectional Area

Thicker materials conduct more heat

Length

Shorter distance = faster conduction

Material Type

Different materials have different conductivity

Time

Longer time = more heat transferred

Rate of conduction ∝ (Area × Temperature Difference) ÷ (Length × Material Resistance)

Real-World Applications

Cooking Pans

Copper or aluminum bases conduct heat quickly and evenly to food.

  • Metal conducts heat from hob to food
  • Wood/plastic handles are insulators

House Insulation

Materials like fiberglass trap air to reduce heat loss through walls and roofs.

  • Loft insulation
  • Cavity wall insulation
  • Double glazing

Thermal Mugs

Vacuum flasks use a vacuum to prevent conduction and keep drinks hot or cold.

  • Double-walled construction
  • Vacuum prevents conduction

Heat Sinks

Metal fins on electronics conduct heat away from components to prevent overheating.

  • Made of copper or aluminum
  • Large surface area helps cooling

Insulation in Daily Life

Clothing

Trapped air between fibers insulates our bodies

Upholstery

Foam and fabric reduce heat loss

Double Glazing

Air gap between glass panes

Coolers

Expanded polystyrene keeps food cold

Pizza Boxes

Corrugated cardboard traps air

Safety Gear

Heat-resistant gloves for handling hot objects

Solved Examples

GCSE Foundation

Example 1: Identifying Conductors

Question: Explain why a metal spoon in a hot drink becomes hot to touch, but a plastic spoon does not.

GCSE Higher

Example 2: Comparing Conductivity

Question: A copper rod and a glass rod of the same dimensions are heated at one end. After 2 minutes, the copper rod is hot along its entire length, but the glass rod is only hot at the heated end. Explain why.

Grade 10 Challenge

Example 3: Practical Application

Question: A house has single-glazed windows. Suggest two ways to reduce heat loss through the windows and explain how they work.

Heat Transfer Resources

Quick Facts

Best Conductor Silver
Best Insulator Vacuum
Metals conduct via Free electrons
Non-metals conduct via Particle vibration

Related Topics

Quick Tip

Materials feel cold because they conduct heat away from your hand! Metal feels colder than wood at the same temperature because it conducts heat faster.

Thermal Conductivity

Measured in

W/mK

Watts per meter per Kelvin

Common Mistake

Don't confuse conduction with convection! Conduction happens in solids without material moving. Convection happens in fluids with material moving.

conservation and dissipation of energy the smart learners online tutoring physics
Physics

Conservation and dissipation of energy

Conservation & Dissipation of Energy

Understanding how energy is transferred, stored, and wasted in physical systems

Energy cannot be created or destroyed

The Law of Conservation of Energy

"Energy cannot be created or destroyed, only transferred from one store to another or dissipated to the surroundings."

Input Energy

Total energy going into a system

Useful Energy

Energy transferred to where it's wanted

Dissipated Energy

Energy wasted to surroundings

Key Principle

Total energy input = Useful energy output + Wasted energy output

No energy is ever lost - it just becomes less useful!

Energy Stores & Transfers

Kinetic Energy

Energy of moving objects

Example: A moving car, running athlete

Thermal Energy

Energy of hot objects

Example: Hot coffee, warm radiator

Gravitational Potential

Energy due to height

Example: Water behind a dam, lifted weight

Chemical Energy

Energy stored in chemical bonds

Example: Food, batteries, fuel

Elastic Potential

Energy in stretched/compressed objects

Example: Stretched spring, drawn bow

Nuclear Energy

Energy stored in atomic nuclei

Example: Nuclear power, sun

Dissipation of Energy

When energy is transferred, some is always dissipated (wasted) to the surroundings, usually as thermal energy.

Energy Flow in a Light Bulb

10 J/s
Light Energy (Useful)
90 J/s
Heat Energy (Wasted)
100 J/s
Total Input

Only 10% of electrical energy is converted to light - the rest is dissipated as heat!

Common Ways Energy is Dissipated:

  • Friction - Kinetic energy → Thermal energy
  • Sound - Energy transferred as noise
  • Air Resistance - Objects heating the air
  • Electrical Resistance - Wires heating up

Efficiency

Efficiency tells us how much of the input energy is transferred usefully.

As a Decimal

Efficiency =
Useful Output ÷ Total Input

As a Percentage

Efficiency =
(Useful ÷ Total) × 100%

Example: LED Bulb (90% Efficient)

90% Useful

Example: Filament Bulb (10% Efficient)

10% Useful

Efficiency of Common Devices:

LED Bulb
90%
Electric Motor
85%
Car Engine
25%
Filament Bulb
10%
Solar Panel
20%

Sankey Diagrams

Sankey diagrams show energy flow - the width of the arrows represents the amount of energy.

LED Light Bulb

100 J Input
90 J Light
10 J Heat

Efficiency: 90%

Car Engine

100 J Fuel
25 J Motion
75 J Heat + Sound

Efficiency: 25%

The thicker the arrow, the more energy is transferred that way!

Interactive Efficiency Calculator

Calculate Efficiency

75 J
100 J

Efficiency

75%
75%

Wasted Energy: 25 J

Real-World Applications

Electric Vehicles

Electric cars are much more efficient than petrol cars.

85%
Electric Motor
25%
Petrol Engine

Electric cars waste less energy as heat

Home Insulation

Reduces energy dissipation from houses.

30%
Heat Saved
£300
Yearly Saving

Loft insulation, double glazing, cavity walls

LED Lighting

LED bulbs are 90% efficient vs 10% for filament bulbs.

90%
LED
10%
Filament

Uses 90% less electricity for same light

Regenerative Braking

Captures kinetic energy that would otherwise be wasted as heat.

70%
Energy Recovered
30%
Range Increase

Used in electric and hybrid vehicles

Solved Examples

GCSE Foundation

Example 1: Calculating Efficiency

Question: A motor transfers 500J of electrical energy. It produces 400J of kinetic energy. Calculate its efficiency.

GCSE Higher

Example 2: Finding Wasted Energy

Question: A television with 250W input power is 65% efficient. Calculate the power wasted.

Grade 10 Challenge

Example 3: Sankey Diagram

Question: A kettle uses 2000J of electrical energy. 1500J heats the water, the rest is wasted. Draw a Sankey diagram and calculate efficiency.

Energy Efficiency of Common Devices

Device Input Energy Useful Output Wasted Output Efficiency
LED Light Bulb 100 J 90 J (light) 10 J (heat) 90%
Electric Motor 100 J 85 J (movement) 15 J (heat) 85%
Solar Panel 100 J 20 J (electricity) 80 J (heat) 20%
Car Engine 100 J 25 J (movement) 75 J (heat, sound) 25%
Filament Bulb 100 J 10 J (light) 90 J (heat) 10%

Reducing Energy Dissipation

Lubrication

Reduces friction between moving parts, reducing heat dissipation.

Example: Oil in car engines

Insulation

Traps air to reduce thermal energy transfer.

Example: Loft insulation, double glazing

Streamlining

Reduces air resistance, saving energy.

Example: Aerodynamic cars

Low Resistance

Using materials with lower electrical resistance.

Example: Superconductors, thicker wires

Energy Resources

Key Facts

Conservation Law Energy can't be destroyed
Dissipation Energy spreads out
Maximum Efficiency 100% (theoretically)
Wasted Energy Usually heat

Related Topics

Quick Tip

Energy is never 'lost' - it's just transferred to less useful forms. Most commonly, it ends up as thermal energy in the surroundings.

Efficiency Formula

Efficiency =

Useful ÷ Total

× 100% for percentage

Common Mistake

Don't think energy is "used up"! It's always conserved - just transferred to different stores.

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Physics

power

Power

Understanding the rate of energy transfer - from light bulbs to power plants

P = E/t = W/t = VI

What is Power?

Definition

Power is the rate at which energy is transferred or work is done. It tells us how quickly energy is being used or generated.

Key Concept

A high power device transfers energy quickly, while a low power device transfers energy slowly.

Unit

Power is measured in watts (W). 1 watt = 1 joule per second (1 W = 1 J/s)

Real-World Understanding

A 100W light bulb converts 100 joules of electrical energy into light and heat every second. A 2000W kettle converts 2000 joules per second - that's why it heats water much faster!

Power Formulas

Basic Power Formula

P = E / t
P
Power (W)
E
Energy (J)
t
Time (s)

Work Formula

P = W / t
P
Power (W)
W
Work (J)
t
Time (s)

Electrical Power

P = V × I
P
Power (W)
V
Voltage (V)
I
Current (A)

Alternative Electrical

P = I²R
P
Power (W)
I
Current (A)
R
Resistance (Ω)

Formula Rearrangements

Find Energy
E = P × t
Find Time
t = E ÷ P
Find Current
I = P ÷ V
Find Voltage
V = P ÷ I

Interactive Power Calculator

Adjust the sliders to see how power, energy, and time are related:

Energy Transfer Simulator

Power (Watts)

100 W

Time (seconds)

60 s

Energy Used

6000 J
E = P × t

Energy Transfer Rate

100 J/s

Your device transfers 100 joules of energy every second

In 60 seconds, total energy = 6000 J

Household Appliance Power Ratings

Different appliances have different power ratings - see how they compare:

LED Light Bulb

10W
  • Uses 10 J/s
  • Cost: ~£0.03 per day
  • 100 hours on 1 kWh

Laptop

50W
  • Uses 50 J/s
  • Cost: ~£0.15 per day
  • 20 hours on 1 kWh

LED TV (50")

100W
  • Uses 100 J/s
  • Cost: ~£0.30 per day
  • 10 hours on 1 kWh

Refrigerator

150W
  • Uses 150 J/s (avg)
  • Cost: ~£0.45 per day
  • Runs 30% of time

Kettle

2000W
  • Uses 2000 J/s
  • Cost: ~£0.10 per boil
  • 30 minutes on 1 kWh

Electric Shower

9000W
  • Uses 9000 J/s
  • Cost: ~£0.45 per 10 mins
  • 6.7 minutes on 1 kWh

Key Point: High power appliances (like kettles and showers) transfer energy very quickly, which is why they heat things rapidly but also cost more to run.

Real-World Power Examples

Solar Panel

Typical residential solar panel produces about 300W of power in full sunlight.

300W
Peak Power
1.5kWh
Daily Energy
Car Engine

A typical family car engine produces around 100,000W (100kW) of power.

100kW
Engine Power
134hp
Horsepower
Wind Turbine

Modern wind turbines can generate up to 3,000,000W (3MW) of power.

3MW
Peak Power
2000 homes
Can Power
Human Power

An average healthy human can sustain about 100W of mechanical power output.

100W
Sustained
400W
Peak (short)

Energy Efficiency & Cost

Appliance Energy Cost Calculator

Efficiency Ratings (A+++ to G)

A+++ D G
A+++
Most Efficient
Saves ~60% energy
D
Average
Standard efficiency
G
Least Efficient
Costs 3x more to run

Solved Examples

GCSE Foundation

Example 1: Energy Transfer

Question: A 2.5kW kettle is used for 3 minutes. How much energy does it transfer?

GCSE Higher

Example 2: Electrical Power

Question: A hairdryer operates at 230V and draws a current of 4.35A. Calculate its power and the energy used in 5 minutes.

Grade 10 Challenge

Example 3: Cost Calculation

Question: A 2kW electric heater runs for 4 hours daily. If electricity costs 28p per kWh, calculate the weekly running cost.

Power Calculator

Solve Power Problems

Result:

0

Power Rating Comparison

Device Typical Power Energy in 1 hour Cost per hour*
LED Light Bulb 10W 0.01 kWh 0.28p
Laptop 50W 0.05 kWh 1.4p
LED TV (50") 100W 0.1 kWh 2.8p
Fridge Freezer 150W 0.15 kWh 4.2p
Desktop Computer 300W 0.3 kWh 8.4p
Microwave 800W 0.8 kWh 22.4p
Kettle 2000W 2.0 kWh 56p
Electric Shower 9000W 9.0 kWh £2.52

*Based on 28p per kWh electricity rate

Power Resources

Quick Facts

1 kW 1000 watts
1 MW 1,000,000 watts
1 GW 1,000,000,000 watts
1 hp 746 watts
1 kWh 3.6 million J

Related Topics

Quick Tip

Remember: Power is the RATE of energy transfer. A 100W bulb uses energy 10 times faster than a 10W LED, which is why it's brighter but costs more to run!

Handy Formula

P = V × I

Power = Voltage × Current

Common Power Ratings

LED Bulb 5-15W
Phone Charger 5-20W
Laptop 30-100W
TV 50-250W
Kettle 2000-3000W

Common Mistake

Don't confuse power (watts) with energy (joules or kWh)! Power is how FAST you use energy, energy is HOW MUCH you use.

Analogy: Power is like speed (mph), Energy is like distance (miles).

the smart learners specific heat capacity physics
Physics

Specific Heat Capacity

Specific Heat Capacity

Understanding why different materials heat up at different rates - essential for GCSE Physics

What is Specific Heat Capacity?

Specific heat capacity (c) is the amount of energy required to raise the temperature of 1 kg of a substance by 1°C. It's a measure of how much energy a material can store.

High c

Lots of energy needed to change temperature. Material heats slowly, cools slowly. Example: Water (4180 J/kg°C)

Low c

Little energy needed to change temperature. Material heats quickly, cools quickly. Example: Copper (385 J/kg°C)

Key Formula

Q = m × c × ΔT
Energy = mass × specific heat capacity × temperature change

Real-World Analogy

Think of specific heat capacity as a material's "thermal inertia." Water has high thermal inertia (like a heavy object that's hard to push) - it resists temperature changes. Metals have low thermal inertia (like a light object that's easy to push) - their temperature changes easily.

The Specific Heat Capacity Formula

Specific Heat Capacity Formula

Q = m × c × ΔT

Where energy transferred (Q) equals mass (m) times specific heat capacity (c) times temperature change (ΔT)

Q
Energy (joules, J)
m
Mass (kilograms, kg)
c
Specific Heat Capacity (J/kg°C)
ΔT
Temperature Change (°C)

Rearranging the Formula

We can rearrange the formula to solve for any variable:

Find Energy (Q)
Q = m × c × ΔT
Find Mass (m)
m = Q ÷ (c × ΔT)
Find c
c = Q ÷ (m × ΔT)
Find ΔT
ΔT = Q ÷ (m × c)

Interactive Heating Simulation

Watch how different materials heat up at different rates due to their specific heat capacities.

1.0 kg
1000 W
60 s

Heating Calculations

Energy Supplied
60,000 J
Q = Power × Time
Temperature Rise
15.6 °C
ΔT = Q ÷ (m × c)
Final Temperature
35.6 °C
Starting at 20°C

ΔT = Q ÷ (m × c) = 60,000 J ÷ (1.0 kg × 385 J/kg°C) = 15.6 °C

Notice how materials with lower specific heat capacity (like copper) heat up much faster than water with the same energy input!

Comparing Specific Heat Capacities

Different materials have very different specific heat capacities. Here's how they compare:

Material Specific Heat Capacity (J/kg°C) Heating Rate* Practical Significance
Water 4180 Very Slow Excellent heat store, moderates climate
Wood 1700 Slow Good insulator, feels warm to touch
Aluminum 900 Moderate Cooking pans, heats evenly
Iron 450 Fast Radiators, heats quickly
Copper 385 Very Fast Electrical wires, heat exchangers
Lead 130 Extremely Fast Lowest common metal, feels cold

*Heating rate comparison assumes same mass and energy input

Temperature Rise vs. Specific Heat Capacity

For the same energy input, materials with lower specific heat capacity experience greater temperature increases.

Practical Applications

Specific heat capacity has important real-world applications:

Central Heating Systems

Water is used in radiators because its high specific heat capacity means it can carry lots of heat around a building without cooling down too quickly.

Comparison: 1 kg of water cooling 1°C releases 4180 J, while 1 kg of iron cooling 1°C releases only 450 J.

Cooking & Food

Different materials in cookware heat differently. Copper-bottom pans heat quickly (low c), while cast iron retains heat well (moderate c but high density).

Example: Water in food prevents burning - it absorbs heat without getting too hot (high c).

Climate Moderation

Oceans and large lakes moderate coastal climates because water's high c means it heats and cools slowly, preventing extreme temperature changes.

Fact: Coastal areas have milder winters and cooler summers than inland areas at the same latitude.

Experiment: Comparing Water and Oil

A common GCSE experiment compares the specific heat capacity of water and oil by heating equal masses with identical heaters and measuring temperature rise.

Water Beaker

Specific Heat: 4180 J/kg°C

Temperature Rise: 5.0 °C

Observation: Heats slowly

Oil Beaker

Specific Heat: ~2000 J/kg°C

Temperature Rise: 10.5 °C

Observation: Heats quickly

With the same heater and same time, oil heats about twice as much as water because it has about half the specific heat capacity.

Solved Example Problems

Example 1: Heating Water

GCSE Foundation

Calculate the energy required to heat 2.5 kg of water from 20°C to 80°C. The specific heat capacity of water is 4200 J/kg°C.

Step 1: Write the formula

Q = m × c × ΔT

Step 2: Identify known values

m = 2.5 kg, c = 4200 J/kg°C, T₁ = 20°C, T₂ = 80°C

Step 3: Calculate temperature change

ΔT = T₂ - T₁ = 80°C - 20°C = 60°C

Step 4: Substitute values into formula

Q = 2.5 × 4200 × 60

Step 5: Perform multiplication

2.5 × 4200 = 10,500

10,500 × 60 = 630,000

Step 6: State the answer with units

Q = 630,000 J or 630 kJ

Step 7: Interpretation

It takes 630 kJ of energy to heat 2.5 kg of water by 60°C. Water's high specific heat capacity means it requires a lot of energy to heat up.

Example 2: Finding Specific Heat Capacity

GCSE Higher

In an experiment, a 0.8 kg block of metal is heated using a 500 W heater for 3 minutes. Its temperature increases from 25°C to 85°C. Calculate the specific heat capacity of the metal.

Step 1: Calculate energy supplied

Power = 500 W, Time = 3 minutes = 180 seconds

Energy = Power × Time = 500 × 180 = 90,000 J

Step 2: Write the specific heat capacity formula

Q = m × c × ΔT

Step 3: Rearrange to solve for c

c = Q ÷ (m × ΔT)

Step 4: Identify known values

Q = 90,000 J, m = 0.8 kg, ΔT = 85°C - 25°C = 60°C

Step 5: Substitute values into formula

c = 90,000 ÷ (0.8 × 60)

Step 6: Calculate denominator

0.8 × 60 = 48

c = 90,000 ÷ 48

Step 7: Perform division

90,000 ÷ 48 = 1,875

Step 8: State the answer with units

c = 1875 J/kg°C

Step 9: Interpretation

The metal has a specific heat capacity of 1875 J/kg°C, which is moderately high (between aluminum and wood).

Example 3: Cooling Problem

Grade 10

A 0.5 kg copper kettle (c = 385 J/kg°C) containing 1.2 kg of water (c = 4200 J/kg°C) cools from 95°C to 25°C. Calculate the total energy released to the surroundings.

Step 1: Calculate energy released by copper kettle

Qcopper = m × c × ΔT = 0.5 × 385 × (95 - 25)

Qcopper = 0.5 × 385 × 70 = 13,475 J

Step 2: Calculate energy released by water

Qwater = m × c × ΔT = 1.2 × 4200 × (95 - 25)

Qwater = 1.2 × 4200 × 70 = 352,800 J

Step 3: Calculate total energy released

Qtotal = Qcopper + Qwater

Qtotal = 13,475 + 352,800 = 366,275 J

Step 4: Convert to kJ and round appropriately

366,275 J = 366.275 kJ ≈ 366 kJ

Step 5: State the answer with units

Total energy released = 366 kJ

Step 6: Interpretation

Notice that although the copper has lower specific heat capacity, the water releases much more energy because it has more mass and much higher c. The water accounts for 96% of the total energy released!

Practice Problems

Test your understanding with these specific heat capacity problems:

Problem 1: Heating Aluminum

GCSE Foundation

A 1.2 kg aluminum pan (c = 900 J/kg°C) is heated from 20°C to 180°C. Calculate the thermal energy required.

Problem 2: Finding Temperature Change

GCSE Higher

When 75,000 J of energy is supplied to 3 kg of iron (c = 450 J/kg°C), calculate the temperature increase.

Problem 3: Mixed Materials

Grade 10 Challenge

A 0.25 kg copper container (c = 385 J/kg°C) holds 0.8 kg of water (c = 4200 J/kg°C). The system is heated from 15°C to 85°C.

  1. Calculate the energy needed to heat the water.
  2. Calculate the energy needed to heat the copper container.
  3. Calculate the total energy required.

Specific Heat Capacity Calculator

Use this calculator to solve for any variable in the specific heat capacity equation (Q = m × c × ΔT).

Solve Specific Heat Problems

Result:

0

Specific Heat Resources

Related Topics

Practical Applications

Free Demo Class

Master specific heat capacity calculations and applications with our expert tutors in an interactive online session

Book Free Demo

Limited spots available for Year 9-10 students

Quick Tip: Water's Special Property

Water has an unusually high specific heat capacity (4180 J/kg°C) compared to most common materials. This makes it excellent for storing heat, which is why it's used in central heating systems and why large bodies of water moderate climate.

Units Check

Always ensure your units are consistent: mass in kg, specific heat in J/kg°C, temperature change in °C, and energy in joules (J). 1 kJ = 1000 J.

Common Mistake

Don't confuse specific heat capacity with thermal conductivity! Specific heat capacity tells us how much energy is needed to change temperature. Thermal conductivity tells us how quickly heat travels through a material.

Quick Reference

Water: 4180 J/kg°C
Ice: 2100 J/kg°C
Aluminum: 900 J/kg°C
Iron: 450 J/kg°C
Copper: 385 J/kg°C
Lead: 130 J/kg°C

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Physics

Kinetic Energy

Kinetic Energy: Formula & Calculations

Understanding the energy of motion - its formula, derivation, and practical applications

What is Kinetic Energy?

Kinetic energy is the energy possessed by an object due to its motion. Any object that is moving has kinetic energy. The amount of kinetic energy depends on two factors:

Mass (m)

The heavier the object, the more kinetic energy it has when moving at the same speed.

Velocity (v)

The faster the object moves, the more kinetic energy it has. Note: KE depends on velocity squared!

The Kinetic Energy Formula

Kinetic Energy Formula

KE = ½ × m × v²

Where kinetic energy (KE) equals one-half times the mass (m) times the square of the velocity (v)

KE
Kinetic Energy (in joules, J)
m
Mass (in kilograms, kg)
v
Velocity (in meters per second, m/s)
½
Constant factor (one-half)

Derivation of the Formula

The kinetic energy formula can be derived from the work-energy theorem, which states that the work done on an object equals its change in kinetic energy.

Derivation Steps

1

Start with Work Done

Work done (W) on an object equals force (F) times displacement (s) in the direction of the force:

W = F × s
2

Apply Newton's Second Law

Force equals mass times acceleration (F = m × a). Substitute into the work equation:

W = (m × a) × s
3

Use Kinematics Equation

From kinematics, for constant acceleration starting from rest: v² = u² + 2as, where u=0, so v² = 2as, therefore a = v²/(2s):

W = m × (v²/(2s)) × s
4

Simplify the Equation

The displacement (s) cancels out:

W = m × v² / 2
5

Work Equals Change in Kinetic Energy

By the work-energy theorem, work done equals change in kinetic energy. Starting from rest, this gives us the kinetic energy formula:

KE = ½ × m × v²

Graphical Representation

The relationship between kinetic energy and velocity is quadratic, while the relationship with mass is linear.

Kinetic Energy vs. Velocity

KE increases with the square of velocity. Doubling velocity quadruples kinetic energy!

Kinetic Energy vs. Mass

KE increases linearly with mass. Doubling mass doubles kinetic energy (at constant velocity).

Interactive Kinetic Energy Demo

Adjust the mass and velocity sliders to see how they affect kinetic energy in real-time.

10 kg
10 m/s

Calculated Kinetic Energy

500 J

KE = ½ × 10 kg × (10 m/s)²

Example Problems

Example 1: Calculating Kinetic Energy

A car with a mass of 800 kg is traveling at a speed of 25 m/s. Calculate its kinetic energy.

Step 1: Write the formula

KE = ½ × m × v²

Step 2: Substitute known values

m = 800 kg, v = 25 m/s

KE = ½ × 800 × (25)²

Step 3: Calculate velocity squared

(25)² = 25 × 25 = 625

KE = ½ × 800 × 625

Step 4: Perform multiplication

½ × 800 = 400

400 × 625 = 250,000

Step 5: State the answer

KE = 250,000 J or 250 kJ

Example 2: Finding Mass from Kinetic Energy

A car has a kinetic energy store of 64,800 J. It is travelling at a speed of 12 m/s. Calculate its mass.

Step 1: Write the formula

KE = ½ × m × v²

Step 2: Rearrange to solve for mass (m)

m = (2 × KE) / v²

Step 3: Substitute known values

KE = 64,800 J, v = 12 m/s

m = (2 × 64,800) / (12)²

Step 4: Calculate denominator

(12)² = 12 × 12 = 144

m = (129,600) / 144

Step 5: Perform division

129,600 ÷ 144 = 900

Step 6: State the answer

Mass = 900 kg

Example 3: Finding Velocity from Kinetic Energy

A 0.5 kg ball has 100 J of kinetic energy. Calculate its velocity.

Step 1: Write the formula

KE = ½ × m × v²

Step 2: Rearrange to solve for velocity (v)

v² = (2 × KE) / m

v = √[(2 × KE) / m]

Step 3: Substitute known values

KE = 100 J, m = 0.5 kg

v = √[(2 × 100) / 0.5]

Step 4: Calculate numerator

2 × 100 = 200

v = √[200 / 0.5]

Step 5: Perform division

200 ÷ 0.5 = 400

v = √400

Step 6: Calculate square root

√400 = 20

Step 7: State the answer

Velocity = 20 m/s

Kinetic Energy Calculator

Use this calculator to solve for any variable in the kinetic energy equation.

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Quick Tip: Velocity Squared

Remember that kinetic energy depends on velocity squared. This means if you double the speed, kinetic energy increases by a factor of 4. If you triple the speed, KE increases by a factor of 9!

Units Check

Always ensure your units are consistent: mass in kg, velocity in m/s, and energy in joules (J). 1 J = 1 kg·m²/s².

Physics

Examples of Energy Transfers

Examples of Energy Transfers

Understanding energy measurement in joules and the fundamental principle of energy conservation

Measuring Energy: The Joule

Energy is a quantity that is measured in joules, J. The joule is the SI unit of energy, named after the English physicist James Prescott Joule. Large quantities of energy are measured in kilojoules (kJ), and megajoules (MJ).

Joule (J)

1 J

The basic unit of energy

Approximately the energy needed to lift an apple 1 meter against Earth's gravity

Kilojoule (kJ)

1 kJ

Equal to 1,000 joules

1 kJ = 1,000 J (10³ J)

Megajoule (MJ)

1 MJ

Equal to 1,000,000 joules

1 MJ = 1,000,000 J (10⁶ J)

Energy Scale Examples

Small Apple (100g)

~200,000 J

Chemical energy stored

Light Bulb (60W) for 1 hour

216,000 J

Electrical energy used

Car Battery (12V, 50Ah)

2.16 MJ

Total energy storage

The Principle of Conservation of Energy

The reason that energy is so important to us is that there is always the same energy at the end of a process as there was at the beginning.

The principle of conservation of energy states that the amount of energy always remains the same. There are various stores of energy. In any process energy can be transferred from one store to another, but energy cannot be destroyed or created.

Key Insight

Energy is never "used up" - it simply transfers from one store to another. The total energy in a closed system remains constant.

Real-World Energy Transfer Examples

These examples show how energy transfers from one store to another while the total amount of energy remains constant.

Hydroelectric Power Plant

Potential energy of water in a dam converts to electrical energy through turbines and generators.

Gravitational Potential Kinetic Electrical

Total energy remains constant throughout the process

Photosynthesis in Plants

Plants convert light energy from the sun into chemical energy stored in glucose.

Light Energy Chemical Energy

Energy is conserved: Light energy = Chemical energy + Heat

Electric Room Heater

Electrical energy from the grid converts to thermal energy that warms a room.

Electrical Thermal

All electrical energy converts to heat (assuming 100% efficiency)

Human Metabolism

Chemical energy from food converts to kinetic energy for movement and thermal energy to maintain body temperature.

Chemical Kinetic + Thermal

Energy conserved: Food energy = Movement + Heat + Waste

Energy Conversion Calculator

Use this interactive calculator to convert between different energy units and see the principle of conservation in action.

Energy Unit Converter

Interactive Conservation Demonstration

Drag the sliders to see how energy redistributes between different stores while the total remains constant.

Kinetic Energy 500 J
Potential Energy 500 J
Thermal Energy 0 J

Total Energy (Conserved)

1000 J

The total energy remains constant at 1000 J regardless of how it's distributed between stores.

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Quick Tip: Energy Conservation

When solving energy problems, always start by writing the conservation equation: Initial Energy = Final Energy. This helps track energy transfers between different stores.

Historical Note

The principle of conservation of energy was first proposed in the early 19th century by several scientists including Julius von Mayer, James Joule, and Hermann von Helmholtz.

Physics

Energy Stores and Transfers

Energy Stores and Transfers

Understanding energy through studying changes in the way energy is stored when a system changes.

Introduction to Energy Systems

A 'system' is an object or a group of objects that interact. In physics, we can understand energy by studying changes in the way energy is stored when a system changes.

Energy Stores in Everyday Events

Throwing an Object Upwards

When you throw a ball upwards, just after the ball leaves your hand it has a store of kinetic energy. When the ball reaches its highest point, it has a store of gravitational potential energy. Just before you catch it again, it has a store of kinetic energy.

Energy Transfer: Kinetic → Gravitational Potential → Kinetic

Boiling Water in a Kettle

When you turn on your electric kettle, the water in the kettle gets hotter. There is now more internal (or thermal) energy stored in the hot water than there was in the cold water.

Energy Transfer: Electrical → Internal (Thermal) Energy

A Car Using Brakes to Slow Down

A moving car has a store of kinetic energy. When the car slows to a halt, it has lost this store of kinetic energy. The brakes exert a frictional force on the wheels, and the brakes get hot. The store of kinetic energy in the car has been transferred to a store of thermal energy in the brakes.

Energy Transfer: Kinetic → Thermal (Internal)

Holding Two Magnets with North Poles Facing

When you hold two magnets with like poles facing, you can feel a force which repels the magnets from each other. When the magnets are close together there is a store of magnetic potential energy. When you release the magnets, they move apart. The magnets' store of magnetic potential energy has reduced and their store of kinetic energy has increased.

Energy Transfer: Magnetic Potential → Kinetic

Types of Energy Stores

We use the following labels to describe the stores of energy you will meet:

Kinetic

Energy of motion

Chemical

Energy stored in chemical bonds

Internal

Thermal energy stored in objects

Gravitational Potential

Energy due to height in gravity field

Magnetic

Energy in magnetic fields

Elastic

Energy stored in stretched/compressed objects

Energy Transfer Methods

Light, sound and electricity are useful, but they are not stores of energy. They are ways of transferring energy from one store to a different energy store.

Example: A Torch

In a torch, the chemical energy stored in the battery causes an electric current (a flow of charge). The electric current causes the temperature of the bulb to increase so much that the bulb lights up. The light cannot be stored but it is useful. When the light strikes an object and is absorbed, the internal energy of the object increases.

Chemical Energy

Electrical Transfer

Light & Heat

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Learning Levels

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Study Tip

When studying energy transfers, always identify both the starting and ending energy stores. This helps understand how energy is conserved during transfers.

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