Can Energy Be Measured Directly or Only Through Its Changes?

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Discussion Overview

The discussion centers around the nature of energy, specifically whether energy can be measured directly or only through its changes. Participants explore concepts related to kinetic and potential energy, the relativity of energy measurements, and the implications of energy changes in various systems.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Conceptual clarification
  • Debate/contested

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants assert that energy, including potential energy, is a relative quantity dependent on the frame of reference.
  • One participant mentions that only changes in energy can be measured, questioning the meaning of this statement and why direct measurement of energy is not possible.
  • Another participant suggests that all forms of energy can be derived from kinetic and potential energy, linking temperature to kinetic energy and molecular bonds to potential energy.
  • Several participants express uncertainty about why only energy changes are measurable and not the absolute energy of a system.
  • One participant emphasizes that while kinetic and potential energies are relative, energy changes are conserved measures of physical changes, allowing for comparisons between systems.
  • Another participant raises a question about establishing an absolute kinetic energy for the Solar System, highlighting the challenges of defining energy in a non-relative manner.
  • There is a discussion about the relationship between mass and energy, referencing the equation E=mc² and its implications for thermal energy and mass.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants generally express uncertainty and engage in debate regarding the measurement of energy, with multiple competing views on the relativity of energy and the significance of energy changes. No consensus is reached on the ability to measure absolute energy.

Contextual Notes

Participants note that the definitions of energy and its measurement may depend on the context and assumptions made, particularly regarding reference frames and the nature of energy changes.

fog37
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Hello Forum,

I understand that energy, either kinetic is a relative quantity whose value depends on the frame of reference and its motion. Is that true for potential energy as well?

I read on a physics book that only changes in energy can be measure. What does that exactly mean? Why can we not measure energy directly but only its changes? Energy is apparently the measure of change of a system. What matters are energy differences and energy changes. Is it not correct to state that a system has a certain amount of energy at a particular time? Should we only talk about energy gains and energy losses for a system?

Thanks!
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Mechanical potential energy is also relative. Consider the gravitational potential energy of a book on a shelf. We arbitrarily assign one of the shelves as zero.

There are many forms of energy other than mechanical PE and KE. Electrical, chemical, heat, nuclear ...
 
Thanks anorlunda.

I would say that all forms of energy can be derived from kinetic and potential. For example, temperature is microscopically tied to kinetic energy. Bonds in molecules to potential energy...

I am still not sure why we can only measure energy changes only and not the particular energy of a system...
 
Thank you. Very interesting.

It still does not seem to address, unless I have missed it, why energy changes is all we can measure and worry about and why energy is a measure of the change in a system while force the agent of change...
 
fog37 said:
Thank you. Very interesting.

It still does not seem to address, unless I have missed it, why energy changes is all we can measure and worry about and why energy is a measure of the change in a system while force the agent of change...

So, what would you say is the absolute energy of, say, the Solar System? Something that is not frame dependent.

You said:

fog37 said:
I would say that all forms of energy can be derived from kinetic and potential.

So, what are you going to do to establish an absolute kinetic energy of the Solar System?
 
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Thanks Perok. I am not sure about the absolute energy of the solar system. I would just say that its value is relative in virtue of these arguments:
  • Kinetic energy is relative (depends on the observer's state of motion)
  • Potential energy is relative (can always add an arbitrary constant value to it)
  • Work is relative since displacement is relative
What is not relative, between different reference frames, is energy changes (differences). Energy differences are the conserved measures of physical changes. So we can measure the energy of a system or compare the energy of one system to the energy of another system but only energy differences have significance.

How do we compare a system with energy ##E_1## and another system with energy ##E_2 <E_1##? The scalar value of their energies is not important. System with energy ##E_1## has a higher ability to change its own dynamical state and/or configuration state OR also a higher ability to change the dynamical state and/or the configuration state of another system...I feel like all myriad forms of energy are somewhat a form of KE or PE. For example, thermal energy is microscopic PE+KE of the object's constituents. Nuclear energy is some form of potential energy deriving from fusion or fission of the nuclei.

The equation ##E=mc^2## from special relativity then states that mass and energy are intrinsically related. So a hotter object, with more thermal energy, has a higher mass than a cooler object...
 

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