Can a Water-Filled Flywheel Generate Extra Energy While in Motion?

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Filling a flywheel with water while in motion does not generate extra energy; instead, it results in energy loss. As water is introduced, friction slows the flywheel down, leading to a decrease in net energy. Even in a hypothetical scenario with frictionless walls, where water is accelerated to match the flywheel's speed, the overall kinetic energy would still decrease due to heat generation. The system remains closed, preserving energy and momentum, but the kinetic energy of the flywheel diminishes. Therefore, the concept does not yield additional energy.
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If i had a driven flywheel with a hollow outer rim, and could rapidly fill it with water while in motion, would i gain any energy?
 
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If you will rapidly fiill it with water while moving, in the first moment water would be still, than friction would cause the water to start moving but the friction would also slow down the flywheel. Means no. You won't gain any energy.
 
Actually, you would lose energy. The momentum would remain the same, and the net energy would decrease. As Tominator said, the flywheel would slow down as the water accelerated, and the final state would be significantly slower than the initial state.
 
Assume that the flywheel has water in it but it's walls are frictionless so the water isn't moving. Then assume vanes in the flywheel are deployed to accelerate the water up to flywheel speed. Ignoring losses to heat, it's a closed system, so energy and momentum are preserved.
 
Ah, thanks every one.
 
Jeff Reid said:
Assume that the flywheel has water in it but it's walls are frictionless so the water isn't moving. Then assume vanes in the flywheel are deployed to accelerate the water up to flywheel speed. Ignoring losses to heat, it's a closed system, so energy and momentum are preserved.

True. I was thinking of kinetic energy, which would decrease (and heat would increase).
 
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