Jon Drake
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Are conservative forces always taken as internal forces?
The discussion revolves around the classification of conservative forces as internal or external forces, particularly in the context of potential energy changes in a system. Participants explore definitions, examples, and implications of conservative and nonconservative forces, as well as their roles in energy transfer and potential energy changes.
Participants express differing views on the classification of forces and their effects on potential energy. There is no consensus on whether only conservative forces can increase potential energy, as some argue for the validity of nonconservative forces in this context.
The discussion highlights the dependence on definitions of system boundaries and the context in which forces are considered. Unresolved questions remain regarding the implications of different force types on potential energy changes.
Where? It might help if we could see the precise statement and its context.Jon Drake said:somewhere
Only conservative forces have a potential energy associated with them. The force acts so as to decrease the potential energy.Jon Drake said:Yes, and I still cannot understand the logic behind the statement.
That answer is plainly incorrect. If I lift a book from the floor and place it on a table, I have increased the potential energy of the book/earth system. But the force of my hand on the book is not conservative.Jon Drake said:''Where? It might help if we could see the precise statement and its context.''
It actually came as a question :-
Which of the following can increase the P.E. of a system?
a. Conservative Force
b. Nonconservative Force
c. Both
d. None
The answer was (a).
Set a puck at rest in the middle of an air hockey table. Attach a spring between the puck and a point on one end of the table. Attach a second spring between the puck and a point on the opposite end. Draw your system boundaries so that the first spring and the puck are part of the system but the second spring is not.Jon Drake said:Alright, my final question is, can conservative forces in any case increase the P.E. of a system?