Dancingjane said:
I am sorry to bring up an old thread, but this question is bothering me. So, what is the total energy of the system? Is it only the potential energy of gravity? If so, why isn't the energy done by the person lifting the chalk up considered?
Energy can neither be created nor destroyed, just transformed into different types.
Dancingjane said:
Basically, the constant KE will be converted to PE, right?
No.
Suppose the chalk starts from rest and is lifted up a bit to point B, at which point it continues to be lifted up at constant speed to point C, and then finally stopped at point D. For simplicity, consider the motion between B and C only, where KE remains constant , but the PE changes. So since KE doesn't change, then how can it be transformed to PE?
The change in PE is due to the external work done on the system (chalk) by the person doing the lifting.
Looking again at the conservation of energy equation
W_{nc} =\Delta KE+\Delta PE,
where W_{nc} is the work done by non-conservative forces (work done by the lifter in this case).
Since there is no KE change here, then the above equation reduces to
W_{nc} =\Delta PE. So it is the work done by the lifter that changes the PE of the chalk.
Rearranging the above equation,
\Delta PE - W_{nc} = 0, or since total energy of an isolated system can never change per conservation of energy laws, then
\Delta PE + \Delta E_{other} = 0, where the system is now defined as the lifter-chalk system and \Delta E_{other} represents the change in forms energy other than PE and KE , that is, chemical/heat energy of the lifter (W_{nc} = -\Delta E_{other}). That is perhaps the 'missing energy' you are wondering about?