Energy Creation: Gravity as an Infinite Source

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In summary, Lewiston, New York uses water from the Niagara River to pump it up the hill and release it during the day to generate electricity.
  • #1
Gamerex
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Many things have an infinite source of energy, where it isn't CONVERTED from other forms of energy, nor mass. Namely, gravity. Gravity pulls. Thus, it is kinetic energy. This kinetic energy comes from nowhere. Say two objects in space were coming towards each other because of gravity. Two rocks in space. These rocks now have potential energy to cause heat. This potential energy has come from gravity, which comes from absoulutly nothing.
 
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  • #2
Does gravitational potential energy mean nothing to you?

Zz.
 
  • #3
Gravity comes from mass.
 
  • #4
But it's not the creation of new energy. The heat generated is the conversion of potential energy to kinetic, not the creation of new energy that didn't exist before. When you move the two object back apart again, you're converting the kinetic energy back into potential energy. The net amount of energy in the universe stays the same.
 
  • #5
it is just two forms of energy interchanging
PE <-> KE
if energy could be created, the oil price would drop and thus saved my pocket. haha
 
  • #6
The thing you have to remember for any simple/practical application to get energy from a object falling under gravity you first have to give it that energy by lifting it up. Thus no net energy is created.
 
  • #7
Mike Cookson said:
The thing you have to remember for any simple/practical application to get energy from a object falling under gravity you first have to give it that energy by lifting it up. Thus no net energy is created.

At Lewiston, New York they do a real nice thing. During the night when power usage is low, they pump water from the Niagara River uphill and put it into a reservoir, then during the day they allow it to flow down to the generators.
 
  • #9
mikelepore said:
At Lewiston, New York they do a real nice thing. During the night when power usage is low, they pump water from the Niagara River uphill and put it into a reservoir, then during the day they allow it to flow down to the generators.

Sure, there are quite a few stations of this nature around the world to cope with spikes in demand.
 
  • #10
mikelepore said:
At Lewiston, New York they do a real nice thing. During the night when power usage is low, they pump water from the Niagara River uphill and put it into a reservoir, then during the day they allow it to flow down to the generators.

what is the point in doing so?
 
  • #11
When the generating capacity of the network is more than demand then the extra energy is 'stored' by pumping the water up the hill. Then when there is more demand than capacity the water can be released providing a quick way of generating more electricity and meeting demand.
 
  • #12
Well, then, doesn't that mean anything that has mass has PE?
 
  • #13
mikelepore said:
At Lewiston, New York they do a real nice thing. During the night when power usage is low, they pump water from the Niagara River uphill and put it into a reservoir, then during the day they allow it to flow down to the generators.
That seems like an incredible waste of energy since it will take more energy to lift the water up the fall that can be recovered from the falling water itself (due to inefficiencis in pumping the water up the fall). Even if there is no loss then its still a waste of time since nothing would be gained by this. I find it very hard to believe that this is actually true. Its not as if the Niagra will run low if the water isn't pumper uphill again ... or does it? Do you have a reference which states this so that I may look it up myself? Thanks.

Pete
 
  • #14
Gamerex said:
Well, then, doesn't that mean anything that has mass has PE?
No. E.g. a photon moving in an inertial frame of reference has (inertial aka relativistic) mass but has zero potential energy. An electron moving in the absense of an EM field has mass and yet has no potential energy. Some objects like the nucleus of most atoms has potential energy which results from the mutual interations of the protons and neutrons inside the nuclues and that contributes to the mass of the nucleus. In fact that is where the nuclear energy can be said to reside (although I myself prefer not to think of energy as being located anywhere).

Pete
 
  • #15
Pmb_phy, it isn't a matter of mechanical efficiency; it's purely practical. Water towers in almost all towns or cities are based upon the same principle. The regular pumping facilities can't handle peak needs, so the towers drop their load into the system when needed. During off-peak times, water is pumped up into the towers since it's not needed elsewhere. It's purely a way to smooth out the supply/demand cycle.
 
  • #16
pmb_phy said:
Its not as if the Niagra will run low if the water isn't pumper uphill again ... or does it?

Controlling the flow rate of the water is a continuous adjustment anyway, according to the needs of the Northeast Power Grid, and also according to the volume of water required to go over the Horseshoe Falls location. There's a treaty between the governments of the U.S. and Canada that requires a certain minimum amount of water to flow over the falls where the tourists are entertained, at the cost of reducing the water fed to the turbines, intentionally reducing the electrical power output.

Sorry, I can't cite a published reference. I've visited the facilities and heard the management make speeches about how they do things. If you want to do a search, the official names of the facilities are the "Robert Moses Niagara Power Plant" and the "Lewiston Pump Generating Plant."
 
  • #17
Gamerex said:
Well, then, doesn't that mean anything that has mass has PE?

Back to the Op...lol.

Of course it does. Your two rocks now hurtling towards each other. Remember, their total energy at the beginning is Pe+Ke. Their energy once they are in motion is STILL Pe+Ke. It's just the ratios that have changed the total remains the same.

As an aside, to the pumping water back to the resevoir issue I have read that some hydro plants use this technique when the design specs require a certain flow to maintain good working operation of the turbines. So what do you do with the excess in a low demand time? Might as well partially refil the resevoir. Unless you are a major connection to the continental grid in our case. In which case I suspect (but stand to be corrected) the operator would rather sell the excess energy to the grid than use it to re-circ water.
 
  • #18
Pete, From what I understand, a photon is a particle of electromagnetic energy, which would have no mass, which would have no P.E. that is based on gravity/kinetic energy.

Also, what do you mean by the mutual interations/interactions? I'm sure you mean the latter, from a spelling error. If so, how would this P.E. somehow turn into the mass of the
the atom?

Furthermore, an electron moving in the absence of a EM field would still be a quark, which has matter, and could or could not have potential kinetic energy from the potion of which it collides with other atoms, thus moving it, or causing it to vibrate.

I'm not sure about nuclear energy. I think it comes from when the atoms split or fuse, causing tremendous amounts of vibrations, which, from what I know, is heat. Can someone clarify?

Also, please check your spelling. It's hard to understand posts with even 1 word wrong. What does interation mean?
 
  • #19
Gamerex said:
Furthermore, an electron moving in the absence of a EM field would still be a quark, which has matter, and could or could not have potential kinetic energy from the potion of which it collides with other atoms, thus moving it, or causing it to vibrate.

Er.. an electron is its own fundamental particle, and it isn't a "quark". It is a lepton, not a hardron. It does have a mass.

This thread has gotten very confusing. Still, do you see the fallacy with your original post, though?

Zz.
 
  • #20
Yes, I do. Error on my part. Above is also an error.
 
  • #21
Obviously energy can be made, or how would it have gotten here. Energy didn't always exist in our realm, there was a start. But on a serious note, mass is energy, but it doesn't create energy. If you try to generate elictricty by tossing a coil up a rod then when it comes back down, you just changed the energy you exerted, since you too have to overcome gravity. There are theories that energy is being created and destroyed in the universe, like in the center of the universe and in the center of galaxies.
 
  • #22
Gamerex said:
Many things have an infinite source of energy, where it isn't CONVERTED from other forms of energy, nor mass. Namely, gravity. Gravity pulls. Thus, it is kinetic energy. This kinetic energy comes from nowhere. Say two objects in space were coming towards each other because of gravity. Two rocks in space. These rocks now have potential energy to cause heat. This potential energy has come from gravity, which comes from absoulutly nothing.

So how exactly did the two rocks get moving in the first place?
 
  • #23
pmb_phy said:
No. E.g. a photon moving in an inertial frame of reference has (inertial aka relativistic) mass but has zero potential energy.
I know you are a proponent of relativistic mass but what is usually called mass is not what a photon moving in an inertial frame of reference have. Instead, if it doesn't move in such a reference but in a circle, than it has mass, and so also gravitational potential energy.
 
  • #24
MagikRevolver said:
There are theories that energy is being created and destroyed in the universe, like in the center of the universe and in the center of galaxies.

Really? Man! Sounds like I'm missing out on my reading. I'm not familiar with any theories that are concordant with currently accepted science that makes such claims. Do you have a link... preferably to a peer-reviewed article, or a preprint?
 
  • #25
Am I the only who finds it hilarious that incomprehensible piece of writing:
"Furthermore, an electron moving in the absence of a EM field would still be a quark, which has matter, and could or could not have potential kinetic energy from the potion of which it collides with other atoms, thus moving it, or causing it to vibrate."
is contained in the same post as the following request:
"Also, please check your spelling. It's hard to understand posts with even 1 word wrong. What does interation mean?".
?
 
  • #26
RetardedBastard said:
Really? Man! Sounds like I'm missing out on my reading. I'm not familiar with any theories that are concordant with currently accepted science that makes such claims. Do you have a link... preferably to a peer-reviewed article, or a preprint?

He's probably thinking of "white holes" [google has links]
 
  • #27
mikelepore said:
He's probably thinking of "white holes" [google has links]

It's the "center of the universe" part that I was especially wondering about
 
  • #28
Think back to mathematics people... an equation (basic algebra for those who don't follow this field professionally):

16 = 8x + 24

how do you solve for x? set the equation to equal to zero and solve. (it's -1 to simplify things a bit :P )

My point being that you cannot create energy without using energy. Every time you go to do so you are setting your convertion equation to zero.

Hope that helped ^^
 
  • #29
DarKonion said:
16 = 8x + 24

how do you solve for x? set the equation to equal to zero and solve. (it's -1 to simplify things a bit :P )

How does the above logically lead to:

DarKonion said:
My point being that you cannot create energy without using energy. Every time you go to do so you are setting your convertion equation to zero.

?
 
  • #30
Purpose of saying that was to show that you always have the two things cancel out (both sides of an equation OR the energy needed to create the potential energy to turn into kinetic)

Rational thinking and a low tolerance for ignorance is all that is needed.
 
  • #31
Eidos said:
How does the above logically lead to:



?


By definition, loss in energy of type X = gain in energy of type Y. Hence loss + gain = 0.
 
  • #32
dst said:
By definition, loss in energy of type X = gain in energy of type Y. Hence loss + gain = 0.

Thank you for explaning that dst.

To be a bit more correct it would equal a negative number because there is never a perfect convertion in nature... there is always friction, momentum, weight, etc to deal with ^^ but I don't believe people get the point... the point is that you cannot simply just tap into a system of energy in hopes to harness it without having to put energy back into that system (through potential or kinetic energy... the example of the Niagra Falls is a good one... ^^).

I do wish you are following.
 
Last edited:
  • #33
So the analogy of energy conservation was to that of a simple algebraic equation?*
I disagree with your reasoning here. You've shown that x=-1 in that example, that's it.

Also: I can write down an equation where conservation of energy is broken, it doesn't mean it is so. You cannot use mathematics to show the conservation of energy. Although from Noether's theorem, if you have physical 'laws' with invariance under time translation then you have conservation of energy.

Even this strong result means nothing if someday we measure the physical constants to have changed slightly and there is nothing logically stopping this from happening. Reality is the feedback for all of our models, what we do on paper is wonderful (and fun :)) but it is reality that will win out.

*{sounds like the opening line to some rap song :P}
 
  • #34
Eidos said:
So the analogy of energy conservation was to that of a simple algebraic equation?*
I disagree with your reasoning here. You've shown that x=-1 in that example, that's it.

Also: I can write down an equation where conservation of energy is broken, it doesn't mean it is so. You cannot use mathematics to show the conservation of energy. Although from Noether's theorem, if you have physical 'laws' with invariance under time translation then you have conservation of energy.

Even this strong result means nothing if someday we measure the physical constants to have changed slightly and there is nothing logically stopping this from happening. Reality is the feedback for all of our models, what we do on paper is wonderful (and fun :)) but it is reality that will win out.

*{sounds like the opening line to some rap song :P}


Not at all. Energy conservation is something that can only be proven inductively in reality. Saying otherwise is religion (and really is, a core concept in Abrahamic faiths), not science.

Breaking conservation of energy leads to breaking conservation of mass and that is where things get out of hand. Outside of that, I can't see why not.
 
  • #35
dst said:
Not at all. Energy conservation is something that can only be proven inductively in reality. Saying otherwise is religion (and really is, a core concept in Abrahamic faiths), not science.
You can prove things inductively in maths, not in measurement. For as long as we have measured properly, the conservation of energy principle has not been broken. We are assuming that it will continue to do so. We are in fact saying a similar thing here though, I'm just weary of using the word proof outside of mathematics.

dst said:
Breaking conservation of energy leads to breaking conservation of mass and that is where things get out of hand. Outside of that, I can't see why not.
How do you mean?
Mass is energy.

What you and I can both agree on though, is that it is reality (i.e. What we can measure), that beats paper and pencil. :wink:
 

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