Why does work done by a conservative force = 0 in a closed path?

In summary, the closed path causes a conservative force to have zero work done because the object is moving in a straight line and is constantly gaining or losing potential energy.
  • #1
saubhik
31
0
Why does work done by a conservative force = 0 in a closed path?
I know this sounds foolish :uhh: but how can some forces have such a property?
Can anybody give a satisfactory physical explanation?:confused:
 
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  • #2
Think of a frictionless circular roller-coaster loop and a mass right in the top of it. You give this mass a very very kick to the left, and it then performs the whole loop, arriving to the top with just exactly that little velocity you transmitted to it during the kick.

This means that with conservative forces, an object can make a loop (or any strange looking path). When the object comes back to its initial position, it will have exactly the same velocity it had when it began its path. And you know that the work done in a object is the change of its kinetic energy: if velocity in beginning and in the end are the same, the kinetic energy hasn't changed when the object performed its loop, so the work gravity has done in it is zero.

This won't happen (in the general case) with non conservative forces. If there were any friction in that roller-coaster, than it can't come back to the initial position with the same velocity.

The physical interpretation of it is that "conservative forces" are associated with potential energy. This means the object may gain kinetic energy spending its potential energy, and also it may store kinetic energy as potential energy (it's like converting some amount of money between two currencies: you may transform some dollars into euros and some euros into dollars, but there's no change on the amount you have overall). The amount of dollars you may have at a particular position is fixed: during your path you may exchange it for euros, but when you come back to your original position, you MUST have the very same qunatity of dollars.

Is it clear?
 
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  • #3
Acut said:
This means that in a non conservative field, an object can make a loop (or any strange looking path). ...The physical interpretation of it is that "conservative forces" are associated with potential energy. This means the object may gain kinetic energy spending its potential energy, and also it may store kinetic energy as potential energy

What did you mean by a "non-conservative field" ?
Can you give a mathematical correlation between a general conservative force and potential energy? (for better understanding)
Are "fields" related to conservative forces only?
 
  • #4
I'm sorry - I've just realized I had commited a mistake in that sentence. What I meant was "conservative field" but it is clearer to explain things in terms of forces. Delay the study of force fields when you get deeper in this subject.

Please read my post again. I've only changed that part, you won't have to read much.

Hmmm, it is somewhat mathematically complicated to explain the correlation between the forces and potential energy (I don't know how your math skills are). Force is the negative gradient of the potential energy. If you are considering 1D systems, then it's minus the derivative of potential energy with respect to x (where x is the position of the object) - but I think this sentence won't make things clear for you, since it appears you are only beggining to study Physics.

A simpler way, although not strictly mathematical as you wanted, is to say that the force always points to the direction of decreasing potential energy (i.e. the potential increases in the opposite direction to the force). Also, if the potential is rapidly changing over a direction, force will have a larger intensity.

It will perhaps be easier to give you a reason for that: when you just put a object in some place (with no initial speed) and there's a conservative force (gravity, electrostatic, spring force, for example) acting upon it, than the object will accelerate in the direction of the force. If the object is accelerating, than it's gaining kinetic energy. This means that the object is loosing potential energy in order to change it for kinetic energy - so the potential increases in the direction opposite to the force.

Also, if potential changes a lot along a particular direction, than the object will win (or loose) quickly a lot of kinetic energy when it travels along that path. If there's a large variation of kinetic energy, there was a large acceleration - so forces have bigger intensities if potential changes significantly over a small distance.

Any doubts?
 
  • #5
conservative forces have many forms, you can write one of them as
(qualitatively for understanding the orm is excellent, but i don't want to get into a fist fight with nabla operator it makes things worse to understand so don't assume it as general.),

[tex]\vec{F}=f(|r|)\hat{r}[/tex]

when you take the integral over the closed path:

[tex]W_{closed path}=\int_{l}\vec{F}.d\vec{l} =\int_{l}f(|r|)\hat{r}.d\vec{l}[/tex]
the aove integral canbe reduced through various techniques,
l being the linear region over which your force moves on or rotates sweeps et cetera..
if you consider the point of action of the force, in one complete rotationdoes the point of action move at all..?
the answer is a smooth,cheesy no which expains things that there is no net displacement of the action point so how is there any work done
although this is not always true for all forces but consevative forces are considered special because of the above form and this resulting property.
 
  • #6
saubhik said:
What did you mean by a "non-conservative field" ?
Can you give a mathematical correlation between a general conservative force and potential energy? (for better understanding)
Are "fields" related to conservative forces only?
here it is:
[tex]\vec{F}_{consevative}= \vec{\nabla} (U) [/tex]
or for a one dimensional case,
[tex]\vec{F}_{consevative}=-\frac{\partial}{\partial x} U [/tex]

so are you preparing for IIT-JEE or are you through with it..(i gave JEE2010 waiting for results)?
 

1. Why is it important to understand the concept of conservative forces?

Understanding conservative forces is important because they have unique properties that make them different from other types of forces. For example, work done by a conservative force is path independent, meaning it does not matter what path is taken between two points, the work done will be the same. This has many practical applications in physics and engineering.

2. What are some examples of conservative forces?

Some examples of conservative forces include gravity, electrostatic force, and elastic force. These forces have the property that the work done by them is independent of the path taken.

3. How does the concept of potential energy relate to conservative forces?

Conservative forces are often associated with the concept of potential energy. The potential energy of an object is the energy it possesses due to its position or configuration in a force field. In the case of conservative forces, the potential energy is a function of position and does not depend on the path taken to get to that position.

4. Can a non-conservative force do work along a closed path?

No, a non-conservative force cannot do work along a closed path. This is because the work done by a non-conservative force is path dependent, meaning it will depend on the path taken between two points. Therefore, the work done along a closed path will not be equal to zero.

5. How does the work-energy theorem apply to conservative forces?

The work-energy theorem states that the net work done on an object is equal to the change in its kinetic energy. For conservative forces, the work done is equal to the negative change in potential energy. This means that the work done by conservative forces will result in a change in potential energy rather than a change in kinetic energy.

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