GPE and KE - Help with AS Physics Coursework

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When an object is lifted, it gains gravitational potential energy (GPE) calculated as GPE = mgh, which depends on its height. As the object falls, this GPE gradually converts into kinetic energy (KE), not all at once, maintaining energy conservation throughout the fall. The total energy, which is the sum of GPE and KE, remains constant at all times during the object's descent. Misunderstandings about the relationship between GPE and KE being inversely proportional are clarified; they are not inversely related but rather part of a constant sum. Understanding these principles is crucial for accurately completing AS physics coursework.
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GPE and KE...please help! argh

Hi I am just finishing my AS physics coursework and just as i thought i understood it someone tells me something else. When you pick up an object i understand that it gains GPE and the amount of this depends on the height it is picked up to, hence GPE = mgh. But when you drop the object what happens to the energy? Does it all suddenly convert to KE, or when it is falling does the GPE gradually turn to KE?

In my coursework i calculated GPE and KE, assuming they should be roughly the same values and they were but then some1 said to me that they should be inversely proportional to each other.

Can some1 please help me thank-you.

meawinner
 
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just think about conservation of energy. when the object is falling, the height changes, by virtue of energy conservation, the object gains kinetic energy.
 
If you lift a ball to some heigth h, you obtain a potential energy due to gravity that is equal to mgh. When the ball drops, the energy is gradually converted to KE, not all at once. To emphasize this point, imagine dropping the ball from heigth h. A friend catches the ball at height h/2. Since we already know the formula for potential energy due to gravity, our new potential would be equal to mgh/2. The ball still maintains an energy potential that was not converted to kinectic. All the potential energy is converted to kinetic energy at a time (only at the instantaneous moment right before impact) when h=0 after the point of release.
 
Last edited:
meawinner said:
In my coursework i calculated GPE and KE ...
some1 said to me that they should be inversely proportional to each other.
meawinner

As are implied by Dr Transport's and quantum mechanic's replies, the conversion of potential energy into kinetic energy (or vice versa in other situations) is a gradual process.

When we have energy conservation, it means that the SUM of kinetic energy and potential energy remains equal at all times.

Those who told you that the kinetic energy should be inversely proportional to the potential energy are totally wrong; they haven't learned the elementary distinction between a sum and a product.
 
The sum of the energys must remain constant. (this is a no loss system of course!)

So Total Energy = Potential Energy + Kinetic Energy

This is true at each point of the fall.
 
So I know that electrons are fundamental, there's no 'material' that makes them up, it's like talking about a colour itself rather than a car or a flower. Now protons and neutrons and quarks and whatever other stuff is there fundamentally, I want someone to kind of teach me these, I have a lot of questions that books might not give the answer in the way I understand. Thanks
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