Conservation of momentum/energy

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    Conservation
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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the conservation of momentum and energy within theoretical and hypothetical systems. Participants explore whether it is possible for a system to gain or lose energy while maintaining constant momentum, or vice versa, and examine the implications of these scenarios in both isolated and non-isolated systems.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Debate/contested
  • Conceptual clarification

Main Points Raised

  • One participant questions if a system can gain energy while keeping momentum constant, suggesting that in a macroscopic body, increased atomic vibrations could lead to energy gain without momentum change.
  • Another participant asserts that for a body gaining energy in the form of heat, it must be part of a larger system that includes the heat source to be considered isolated.
  • There is a discussion on the relationship between kinetic and potential energy, with one participant asking for examples where changes in potential energy do not affect kinetic energy.
  • A participant provides an example involving an object in a potential field, explaining that applying a force with zero net effect can change potential energy without altering velocity.
  • Further clarification is given with a real-world example of lifting an object, illustrating how potential energy increases while kinetic energy remains unchanged.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express differing views on the independence of kinetic and potential energy, and whether energy and momentum can change independently. The discussion remains unresolved with multiple competing perspectives presented.

Contextual Notes

Participants discuss the implications of isolated versus non-isolated systems, and the definitions of energy types, which may depend on specific conditions or assumptions not fully articulated in the discussion.

dougy
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Hello,

Inside a theoretical perfectly isolated system, momentum and energy are conserved. But is it possible to imagine a system gaining/losing energy while its momentum remains the same, or a system gaining/losing momentum while its energy remains the same? Or does one necessarily imply the other?

The way I see it, if the system consists of one macroscopic body, then its momentum is equal to the vectorial sum of the momentums of all its atoms. So if this body was to gain energy in the form of heat, then its atoms would vibrate more rigorously, thus if on average all these atoms "pushed" equally more in all directions then wouldn't this body be an example of a system gaining energy while keeping the same momentum?
 
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dougy said:
So if this body was to gain energy in the form of heat
Then this body alone does not constitute an isolated system. You would have to include the heat source in the system for it to be considered isolated.

dougy said:
But is it possible to imagine a system gaining/losing energy while its momentum remains the same, or a system gaining/losing momentum while its energy remains the same?
Why not? The total energy of a system in general is the sum of its potential and kinetic energies. The momentum of the system is related only to the kinetic energy of the system via [itex]p = \sqrt{2mK}[/itex], and is independent of the potential energy.
 
Last edited:
Fightfish said:
Then this body alone does not constitute an isolated system. You would have to include the heat source in the system for it to be considered isolated.

Yes of course, I was there referring to a hypothetical non-isolated system gaining energy and not momentum.

Fightfish said:
Why not? The total energy of a system in general is the sum of its potential and kinetic energies. The momentum of the system is related only to the kinetic energy of the system via [itex]p = \sqrt{2mK}[/itex], and is independent of the potential energy.

Is it obvious that kinetic and potential energies are independent? Do you have an example where the variation of the potential energy of a system is not accompanied with a variation of its kinetic energy?
 
dougy said:
Do you have an example where the variation of the potential energy of a system is not accompanied with a variation of its kinetic energy?
Sure, consider any object present in a potential field. As long as I apply a force on the object such that the net force on the object is zero, I can change its position (and hence its potential energy) without changing the velocity of the object.
 
Fightfish said:
Sure, consider any object present in a potential field. As long as I apply a force on the object such that the net force on the object is zero, I can change its position (and hence its potential energy) without changing the velocity of the object.

All good, thank you!
 
Fightfish said:
Sure, consider any object present in a potential field. As long as I apply a force on the object such that the net force on the object is zero, I can change its position (and hence its potential energy) without changing the velocity of the object.
To give a real world example just consider picking up something of mass m form the ground and holding it over your head. Since the potential energy is mgh and the object went from standing still to standing still again it has just gained mg times your height in potential energy.
 

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