Is Perpetual Motion Possible in Physics?

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the concept of perpetual motion in physics, particularly addressing the misconceptions surrounding perpetual motion machines versus natural motion observed in systems like atoms and solar systems. Participants explore the implications of energy conservation, entropy, and the definitions of perpetual motion.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation
  • Debate/contested

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants question whether atoms and solar systems can be considered forms of perpetual motion, suggesting a need for clarification on what constitutes perpetual motion.
  • Others clarify that perpetual motion typically refers to machines that can do useful work without energy input or with perfect efficiency, rather than motion itself.
  • There is a discussion about the relationship between input and output energy in machines, with some asserting that a perpetual motion machine would need to have an output greater than its input.
  • Entropy is mentioned as a critical factor, with participants noting that total entropy in an isolated system always increases, which implies that useful energy decreases over time.
  • Some participants express skepticism about "free energy" concepts, arguing that all energy resources require harnessing and are not free in the sense of perpetual motion machines.
  • Questions arise regarding the definition of perfect efficiency, with some suggesting that it would imply total input equals total output, while others argue that a perpetual motion machine would need to exceed 100% efficiency to account for energy losses.
  • One participant shares an anecdote about a maintenance worker's belief in a perpetual energy machine using thermocouples, highlighting the misunderstanding of energy conservation principles.
  • There is a debate about whether the motion of planets and electrons constitutes perpetual motion, with some arguing that energy extraction from such systems would lead to a loss of energy, contradicting the idea of perpetual motion machines.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants do not reach a consensus on the definitions and implications of perpetual motion, with multiple competing views remaining on what constitutes perpetual motion and the feasibility of such systems.

Contextual Notes

Participants express various assumptions about energy conservation, definitions of efficiency, and the nature of motion in physical systems, which remain unresolved within the discussion.

Alkayus
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I am sorry if this is a weird or stupid question, as I am currently in college and majoring in physics, but have not taken any physics classes yet. The weird thing I was thinking about was the impossibility of perpetual motion. Are not atoms a form of perpetual motion? What about solar systems? I am not asking this to be controversial or anything of the sort. I am just trying to learn a bit more. Thank you so much for any input.
 
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When we speak about the impossibility of 'perpetual motion' we really mean perpetual motion machines: something that can do useful work without energy input or with perfect efficiency. It's not motion per se that is the problem.
 
Doc Al said:
When we speak about the impossibility of 'perpetual motion' we really mean perpetual motion machines: something that can do useful work without energy input or with perfect efficiency. It's not motion per se that is the problem.

I thought the machine is something that you get more output than input energy.
 
Ah, I see. Thank you very much for clearing up that tiny, but important detail.
 
Bloodthunder said:
I thought the machine is something that you get more output than input energy.
That's pretty much the same thing. If the input energy is zero, then it fits your description (output is greater than input). And something that fits your description can use part of the output energy for the input energy, requiring no input energy from an outside source. So a machine fitting either description can fit the other as well.
 
entropy is important. It is a measure of disorder - meaning that high entropy would be heat energy, low entropy would be useful energy stored in a battery.
Total entropy always increases or stays the same in an isolated system. Therefore the useful energy always decreases.
Doc Al is right, when people talk about perpetual motion machines, they mean machines that make useful energy "for free".
You might think that a solar power cell makes useful energy for free, but you must include the sun in the system, so then you see total entropy actually increases.
 
I find it kind of funny, discouraging, when someone comes up with a mad hatter scheme of free energy for the masses. If you think about it, all of the energy resources we use are free- oil, wind, solar, geothermal, nuclear, hydro - just waiting there for us to use. It is the harnesing of these resources that costs a lot of money.
 
256bits said:
I find it kind of funny, discouraging, when someone comes up with a mad hatter scheme of free energy for the masses. If you think about it, all of the energy resources we use are free- oil, wind, solar, geothermal, nuclear, hydro - just waiting there for us to use. It is the harnesing of these resources that costs a lot of money.

I think you misunderstand the concept of "free energy".
 
Bloodthunder said:
I thought the machine is something that you get more output than input energy.

Generating electricity etc. basically takes energy in one form and uses some of it to do work.

A perpetual motion machine would have energy put into it and be able to use it to do work without using any of it.
 
  • #10
256bits said:
I find it kind of funny, discouraging, when someone comes up with a mad hatter scheme of free energy for the masses. If you think about it, all of the energy resources we use are free- oil, wind, solar, geothermal, nuclear, hydro - just waiting there for us to use. It is the harnesing of these resources that costs a lot of money.

Sorry if I caused confusion by saying 'making useful energy for free' I don't mean Gibbs free energy or any kind of technical term. I literally mean that the useful amount of energy in the universe must decrease or stay equal.
In our case, it is the sun that is causing a decrease in useful energy (from potential to light). The energy from the sun's rays eventually becomes all the energy resources you mentioned above. And then we decrease its usefulness further by turning it into even more disordered forms of heat.
 
  • #11
Redbelly98 said:
That's pretty much the same thing. If the input energy is zero, then it fits your description (output is greater than input). And something that fits your description can use part of the output energy for the input energy, requiring no input energy from an outside source. So a machine fitting either description can fit the other as well.

Was actually just wondering about the perfect efficiency part. What does it mean by perfect efficiency?
 
  • #13
Wouldn't that be for one where total input = total output? Like matter-antimatter annihilations? In a perpetual motion machine, I think the efficiency would be >100%, would it not?
 
  • #14
Bloodthunder said:
Wouldn't that be for one where total input = total output? Like matter-antimatter annihilations? In a perpetual motion machine, I think the efficiency would be >100%, would it not?

It would have to be greater than 100% to overcome things such as friction, yes. If it were possible of course.
 
  • #15
Thank you all very much for the insight. I'm quite happy that not only was my question answered, but sparked a very interesting conversation.
 
  • #16
Alkayus said:
Thank you all very much for the insight. I'm quite happy that not only was my question answered, but sparked a very interesting conversation.

Hit up wikipedia and look up perpetual motion if you want to know more about it. Just be VARY wary or sites online that propose a working perpetual motion machine or something related. Many will use the example you gave, that of an electron around an atom, as evidence that it is possible.
 
  • #17
I was also interested in this:

Physics says its impossible to achieve perpetual motion but planets are constantly in motion and so are electrons? If your objective was to get a planet from one side of the sun to the other without wasting any energy than this is possible, therefore perpetual motion has been achieved. Or am I mistaken?
 
  • #18
curious1409 said:
I was also interested in this:

Physics says its impossible to achieve perpetual motion but planets are constantly in motion and so are electrons? If your objective was to get a planet from one side of the sun to the other without wasting any energy than this is possible, therefore perpetual motion has been achieved. Or am I mistaken?

There is a difference between an object in freefall and free energy machines. If you were to try to tap the energy of an orbiting planet (perhaps by building a huge torus around the planet's orbit that generates a current as the planet moves through it) you would sap energy from the speed of the orbit. It would shortly fall into the sun.

Perpetual motion machines don't just refer to objects that move perpetually, the idea is you have a system where energy is recycled 100% and yet energy is taken out to do work.
 
  • #19
I once met a maintenance guy at a factory that thought he had come up with a perpetual energy machine, using thermocouples. Insulate a cold storage very very well. Then use a thermocouple to generate electricity.

I tries to explain to him that even if it was perfectly insulated, so that it would stay cold in a hot room forever, then as soon as you started drawing power from the thermocouple the cold storage would start heating up. He refused to believe that.
 
  • #20
curious1409 said:
I was also interested in this:

Physics says its impossible to achieve perpetual motion but planets are constantly in motion and so are electrons? If your objective was to get a planet from one side of the sun to the other without wasting any energy than this is possible, therefore perpetual motion has been achieved. Or am I mistaken?
Please read the second post in the thread!
 

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