Exploring Power Needed to Lift Mass

In summary, the discrepancy between theory and reality may be due to the fact that we are not considering the power that is being used to maintain altitude.
  • #1
MattRob
211
29
I'm a little afraid to ask something that should be such a basic question, yet there seems to be an enormous discrepency in-between theory and reality, here.

In many, many problems I've worked with "find the work to lift X", you simply take the change in potential energy. When lifting Mass [itex]m[/itex] by distance [itex]h[/itex], finding the work [itex]W[/itex] is a simple matter of
[itex]W = mgh[/itex].

But things get a lot more interesting when we ask not about the total energy, but the power required.

If I take the above instance at face value, then I end up with the absurd result that a small, thumb-sized, say, [itex]P[/itex] = .5 Watt motor can be used in a crane to lift a 1,000-kilo elevator to the top of a skyscraper, given enough time, [itex]t = \frac{P}{W}[/itex]

Experience, however, would insist that that's simply not the case. What should happen instead, is the motor will create a little bit of tension in the cable and stop there, being unable to overcome the weight of the load. No matter how much [itex]mgh[/itex] says that there's no power going on when something is stationary, I simply can't believe that a little 1-watt motor could hold a 1,000-ton weight up against gravity - and then slowly pull it up on top of that.

So what would be a proper way to calculate the power needed to lift a certain mass? I can imagine calling on the Equivalence principle (saying that gravity is actually the result of an accelerated frame) and saying that we actually need to accelerate it at 1 g, so every second we need to impart the kinetic energy it'd take to bring it to 9.8 m/s, to counteract gravity pulling it at 9.8 m/s2, so [itex]P = \frac{1}{2}mg^{2}[/itex] to counteract its weight, and any amount of power in addition to accelerate it upwards.

Is that a valid way to approach the problem in terms of power?
 
Physics news on Phys.org
  • #2
MattRob said:
If I take the above instance at face value, then I end up with the absurd result that a small, thumb-sized, say, [itex]P[/itex] = .5 Watt motor can be used in a crane to lift a 1,000-kilo elevator to the top of a skyscraper, given enough time, [itex]t = \frac{P}{W}[/itex]
It can. You just need good gears with a huge ratio to reduce torque at the motor and friction enough.

MattRob said:
Is that a valid way to approach the problem in terms of power?
It doesn't even have correct units. You arbitrarily introduce a second and give it some special meaning here.
 
  • Like
Likes MattRob
  • #3
You can (theoretically) create a machine with the necessary mechanical advantage for a small motor to
raise any specified weight. Say, a small gear driving a very large gear with no friction involved.
 
  • Like
Likes MattRob
  • #4
Actually, it's pretty easy to do with hydraulics. Small, motor, positive displacement pump, big hydraulic reservoir, and you can lift a lot of weight.

That is why a man can lift a heavy vehicle using a hydraulic jack.
 
  • Like
Likes MattRob
  • #5
There are two important ratios in studying machines. Velocity Ratio and Mechanical Advantage. Velocity Ratio is based just on the geometry of the set up and it boils down to distance moved by effort / distance moved by load. Mechanical Advantage, otoh, is Force applied to load / Effort and, because of Friction and having to lift the mass of the machinery in most cases, this will never be as 'good' as the VR suggests.
MA/VR = Efficiency
You can either talk in terms of Work (Force times distance) in and out or Power (Force times velocity) in and out. They are equivalent and you will get the right (same) answers as long as you use the MA and VR appropriately.
 
  • Like
Likes MattRob
  • #6
mfb said:
It can. You just need good gears with a huge ratio to reduce torque at the motor and friction enough.

It doesn't even have correct units. You arbitrarily introduce a second and give it some special meaning here.

In the back of my mind I knew the units didn't add up, which is why It troubled me so much to ask.

J Hann said:
You can (theoretically) create a machine with the necessary mechanical advantage for a small motor to
raise any specified weight. Say, a small gear driving a very large gear with no friction involved.

I guess this is just a case where I just need to get over my gut instinct. It's just very difficult to take peoples' word for it that a 1-watt motor could hold up the weight of a 10,000 ton package and lift it up against gravity, however slowly. But, physics is as physics does, and cares little for human intuition.

Let's look at something, though - what about a helicopter hovering in the air? It's constantly burning fuel, so it's consuming a certain amount of energy per second in the form of chemical (fuel) energy to maintain altitude. What's fundamentally different about that?

Clip on extra weight to the helicopter and it's going to have to throttle its engine up to even greater power to maintain altitude. So there's got to be something different, here.

EDIT: Would an analysis in an inertial frame help, here? In a free-fall frame, a motor sitting on a wench is co-accelerating with the weight it is lifting, so doesn't develop a difference in energy. The ground underneath it keeping it in place keeps the two objects from developing a difference in energy over time.

With the helicopter, on the other hand, there is no ground underneath it holding it in place, so it must use some form of stored energy (chemical energy of the fuel) to accelerate it upwards in the inertial frame, to keep it a constant height above the ground (which, in an inertial frame, is also accelerating upwards).

So the question is; how much energy does it need to consume per second to keep itself aloft?
 
Last edited:
  • #7
MattRob said:
In the back of my mind I knew the units didn't add up, which is why It troubled me so much to ask.
I guess this is just a case where I just need to get over my gut instinct. It's just very difficult to take peoples' word for it that a 1-watt motor could hold up the weight of a 10,000 ton package and lift it up against gravity, however slowly. But, physics is as physics does, and cares little for human intuition.
You're trying to analyze too much at one time without fully understanding the basics.

The number of watts a motor generates is not what keeps a small weight or a large weight suspended. That chore is dependent entirely on the statics of the situation, that is, do you have a strong enough cable such that it doesn't snap when it supports the load, is the brake of the hoist strong enough so that it doesn't break under the load, etc.

By moving the weight upward against gravity, there is a change in the potential energy of the weight with respect to the ground, which is what mgh is, the change in potential energy of the weight, mg, due to the change in height, h, above the ground.

Since the energy input is E = mgh, the power input on raising or lowering the load is going to change with the amount of time, Δt, it takes to raise or lower the load.
Power P = mgh / Δt

The amount of power a winch motor has determines how quickly or how slowly the change in potential energy of the weight occurs, assuming the machine is capable of working against friction, etc. A motor with a large amount of power, which is measured in watts or horsepower, will be able to raise the same weight more quickly than a less powerful motor.

Let's look at something, though - what about a helicopter hovering in the air? It's constantly burning fuel, so it's consuming a certain amount of energy per second in the form of chemical (fuel) energy to maintain altitude. What's fundamentally different about that?

Clip on extra weight to the helicopter and it's going to have to throttle its engine up to even greater power to maintain altitude. So there's got to be something different, here.

EDIT: Would an analysis in an inertial frame help, here? In a free-fall frame, a motor sitting on a wench is co-accelerating with the weight it is lifting, so doesn't develop a difference in energy. The ground underneath it keeping it in place keeps the two objects from developing a difference in energy over time.

Careful here. Wenches (= girls or young women) don't like to support large loads. :rolleyes:

Winches, however, do just fine, as long as you don't overload them. :wink:

I don't know what you mean by "co-accelerating". A winch can be fixed to the ground, so that it is not moving, and still operate perfectly fine, as long as too much (static) load is not placed on it.

With the helicopter, on the other hand, there is no ground underneath it holding it in place, so it must use some form of stored energy (chemical energy of the fuel) to accelerate it upwards in the inertial frame, to keep it a constant height above the ground (which, in an inertial frame, is also accelerating upwards).

So the question is; how much energy does it need to consume per second to keep itself aloft?
Now, you're jumping from winches to helicopters, which work on different principles.

Think of the blades of a helicopter as a giant propeller. The torque of the motor turning on the chopper spins the blades, which, depending on their setting, tend to move large quantities of air about. When the blades are turning at a certain speed, the movement of the air creates a force, known as lift, which acts in the opposite direction to gravity, which wants to pull the machine to earth.

As long as the lift generated by the turning blades is equal to the weight of the helicopter, the net force acting on the helicopter is zero, and the chopper stays stationary with respect to the earth.

If the speed of the motor is increased slightly, more lift is generated, and the net force acting on the craft is slightly positive, and the chopper will start to rise and change altitude.

If you add more weight to the helicopter, spinning the blades at the same rate previously generates the same amount of lift, but the weight of the helicopter has changed, and the craft stays on the ground. The motor must be throttled up to increase the amount of lift which the blades generate, until the lift is greater than the total weight of the craft. Only then can the helicopter get off the ground.
 
  • Like
Likes MattRob
  • #8
A hovering helicopter is doing NO work on the load. This means it has zero efficiency. This example shows how non-intuitive this stuff can be.
 
  • Like
Likes russ_watters and MattRob
  • #9
MattRob said:
It's just very difficult to take peoples' word for it that a 1-watt motor could hold up the weight of a 10,000 ton package and lift it up against gravity, however slowly. But, physics is as physics does, and cares little for human intuition.

I have to bring in that pesky Efficiency thing again. When you use gears, worms, screws, levers etc to produce a massive mechanical advantage, the extreme ratio needed (plus dead weight) will usually mean that the efficiency is very low. So the mechanism just won't work in reverse at all. For example, a simple car screw jack doesn't need a 'stop' to avoid the car settling down and the handle spinning round when you let go. There is so much stiction that it just won't work in reverse. Your 1W motor could eventually provide enough Joules of energy to the system to lift that heavy package a metre, say, but the total energy put in by the motor would need to be tens of times more than the 108 J of work actually done on the package.
As you say, intuition often goes counter to what Physics can prove to you. But intuition is based on a very limited amount of actual bodily experience. That's why Magicians get away with it.
 
  • Like
Likes MattRob
  • #10
MattRob said:
What should happen instead, is the motor will create a little bit of tension in the cable and stop there, being unable to overcome the weight of the load.
And that's exactly what does happen - the motor cannot provide enough FORCE to overcome the weight of the load; there is no movement so no work is done.
 
  • #11
MrAnchovy said:
And that's exactly what does happen
It is not - if we have appropriate gears or hydraulics, as explained before.

The helicopter doesn't have that option available, it has to generate enough lift by accelerating air downwards, which requires constant power that heats the air eventually.
 
  • #12
I should probably have noted that I have covered classical mechanics in formal education, it's just this one particular problem has never really made sense to me, even though I know a simple [itex]P = E/Δt = mgh/Δt = FD/Δt = FV[/itex] is how everything says it should be solved. Which, while it does cover a motor mounted on the ground (probably by a mechanical device (winch) rather than a woman (wench), haha. My bad), doesn't seem to be a complete description for a more complex case of seeing how much chemical energy a helicopter must drain in the form of fuel to stay aloft.

And so I am very familiar with forces and balancing those and such - those I find very intuitive.

mfb said:
It is not - if we have appropriate gears or hydraulics, as explained before.

The helicopter doesn't have that option available, it has to generate enough lift by accelerating air downwards, which requires constant power that heats the air eventually.

Hydraulics is really an excellent way to answer the question, actually. I've covered some basic fluid mechanics, and it's a lot more convincing in that case because it's easier to trace back and visualize how conservation laws require that hydraulics behave that way.

I'm still rather curious about exactly how I'd go about trying to answer the helicopter problem, though.

I'm going to take a crack at it, here. I understand I'm going to be making some massive simplifications, so this isn't much better than a ballpark estimate, but I'd like to know if this is a valid sort of approach to take.

Let's say the helicopter has mass [itex]M_{h}[/itex], and a blade radius [itex]r_{b}[/itex]. The blades then cover an area of [itex]A_{b} = πr_{b}^{2}[/itex]

Now let's isolate a single second of time to make the analysis a bit easier. In a single second of free-fall, the helicopter would develop a momentum of [itex]ρ_{h} = M_{h}v = M_{h}aΔt = M_{h}gΔt = M_{h}g(1 second)[/itex]

By conservation of momentum, an equal amount of momentum of the air must be forced down to keep the helicopter stationary: [itex]p_{air} = M_{air}v_{air}[/itex]

The mass of the air will be the density multiplied by the volume of air displaced. [itex]M_{air} = ρ_{airdensity}V_{air}[/itex]

Now, this is why I chose to isolate a single second: finding the mass and velocity of the displaced air will be tricky, because the volume of the air displaced in a single second will be a cylinder, the area of the base of which will be [itex]A_{b} = πr_{b}^{2}[/itex] and the height of which will be the velocity of the air times the period of time, Δt, which we've chosen to be one second, [itex]h = v_{air}Δt[/itex].
*note, do not confuse volume [itex]V_{air}[/itex] with velocity [itex]v_{air}[/itex]

[itex]V_{air} = A_{b}h = πr_{b}^{2}v_{air}Δt[/itex]

Back to the momentum of the air:
[itex]p_{air} = M_{air}v_{air}[/itex]
Substituting:
[itex]M_{air} = ρ_{airdensity}V_{air}[/itex]
[itex]V_{air} = A_{b}h = πr_{b}^{2}v_{air}Δt[/itex]

[itex]p_{air} = ρ_{airdensity}V_{air} v_{air} = ρ_{airdensity}A_{b}h v_{air} = ρ_{airdensity} πr_{b}^{2}v_{air}^{2}Δt [/itex]

Since we've isolated a single second under the assumption the momentums, thus forces, are balanced;
[itex]p_{air} = p_{h} = M_{h}gΔt = ρ_{airdensity} πr_{b}^{2}v_{air}^{2}Δt [/itex]
Now we can isolate the velocity of the displaced air using that last equality:
[itex]M_{h}gΔt = ρ_{airdensity} πr_{b}^{2}v_{air}^{2}Δt [/itex]
[itex]\frac{M_{h}g}{ρ_{airdensity} πr_{b}^{2}} = v_{air}^{2}[/itex]
[itex]v_{air} = \sqrt{\frac{M_{h}g}{ρ_{airdensity} πr_{b}^{2}}}[/itex]

Now, going back to our earlier expression we can find the mass of the air:
[itex]M_{air} = ρ_{airdensity}V_{air} = ρ_{airdensity}πr_{b}^{2}v_{air}Δt[/itex]

With mass and velocity, we can find the kinetic energy imparted into the air each second with the familiar
[itex]K_{E} = \frac{1}{2}mv^{2}[/itex]

If we try plugging in the density of air at 1.22 kg/m^3, and pull our other numbers off of wiki's description of the UH-60, we end up getting that there's about 1 MJ of kinetic energy in the air every second, meaning about 1 MW of power (using maximum takeoff mass). This lines up quite nicely with wiki's report that the helicopter uses two 1,400 kW engines, considering a realistic efficiency and that this was only a ballpark estimate with the "solid cylinder of sea-level air" assumption.
 
  • Like
Likes mfb
  • #13
mfb said:
It is not - if we have appropriate gears or hydraulics, as explained before.

The helicopter doesn't have that option available, it has to generate enough lift by accelerating air downwards, which requires constant power that heats the air eventually.
In a helicopter, one could attempt to reduce the inefficiency by increasing the rotor diameter -- pushing a greater quantity of air downward with a reduced speed. Lift goes roughly as mass flow rate times downwash velocity. Power goes roughly as mass flow rate times the square of downwash velocity. To a first approximation, a bigger rotor gives a better lift to power ratio. However, a rotor big enough to lift a 1000 ton weight using a 1 watt motor would be somewhere between ludicrous and impossible.
 
  • #14
Very far in the impossible range, at least with current technology and on Earth. Larger rotors also add mass. Human-powered helicopters are barely able to lift off (still with ground effect) - at less than 200 kg and a power of more than 100 W.
 
  • #15
mfb said:
Very far in the impossible range, at least with current technology and on Earth. Larger rotors also add mass. Human-powered helicopters are barely able to lift off (still with ground effect) - at less than 200 kg and a power of more than 100 W.
The efficiency just gets worse and worse (lift / drag, in the case of flying machines) when your input force or power get very low.
There are few worse examples for discussing basic Work problems than rockets and helicopters. Stick to gears, levers and inclined planes for the first few years of learning the subject.
 
  • #16
Hi MattRob,
In your very first initial post you declared the equation [itex] P={1\over 2} m g^2 [/itex]

That looks like an interesting equation. It looks like [itex] E={1\over 2} m v^2 [/itex] but I don't see how you simply replaced [itex] E [/itex] by [itex] P [/itex] and [itex] v^2 [/itex] by [itex] g^2 [/itex]

Can you please show your derivation of that formula? Please show the math and describe it in many words being so explanatory that even those who are not familiar with the equations can still understand your derivation. I am familiar with the equations but I would enjoy seeing both.

Thank you very much!
 
  • #17
anorlunda said:
Actually, it's pretty easy to do with hydraulics. Small, motor, positive displacement pump, big hydraulic reservoir, and you can lift a lot of weight.

That is why a man can lift a heavy vehicle using a hydraulic jack.
For Thanksgiving, Mythbusters ran a marathon. In one episode, they lifted a car with an ordinary shop-vac!
 
  • #18
MattRob said:
I guess this is just a case where I just need to get over my gut instinct. It's just very difficult to take peoples' word for it that a 1-watt motor could hold up the weight of a 10,000 ton package and lift it up against gravity, however slowly. But, physics is as physics does, and cares little for human intuition.
Ever change a tire on a car? However did you manage to lift one side of a car off the ground all by yourself?!
Let's look at something, though - what about a helicopter hovering in the air? It's constantly burning fuel, so it's consuming a certain amount of energy per second in the form of chemical (fuel) energy to maintain altitude. What's fundamentally different about that?
A hovering helicopter is a bit like swimming against a river. But the power required is a[n inverse] function of the rotor size. You can have an arbitrarily large rotor and arbitrarily small power.
 
  • Like
Likes sophiecentaur
  • #19
Doug Brown said:
Hi MattRob,
In your very first initial post you declared the equation [itex] P={1\over 2} m g^2 [/itex]

That looks like an interesting equation. It looks like [itex] E={1\over 2} m v^2 [/itex] but I don't see how you simply replaced [itex] E [/itex] by [itex] P [/itex] and [itex] v^2 [/itex] by [itex] g^2 [/itex]

Can you please show your derivation of that formula? Please show the math and describe it in many words being so explanatory that even those who are not familiar with the equations can still understand your derivation. I am familiar with the equations but I would enjoy seeing both.

Thank you very much!
The formula is wrong, as discussed in previous posts already.

Note that this thread is from 2015.
 
  • #20
I think we need to break this down much more simply, because it is a very simple problem/question
the 5 watt motor can lift the earth... as Archimedes said, "the long lever...etc" you need deep gearing and that 5 watt motor will lift what ever object you want, the only thing that will vary will be how faster it will be done. power is torque x speed ... so you don't have any movement, there was no power used.. power is the rate of KE change. you can pick a second, but then, that will determine how much mass can be lifted by some distance. 5 watts over 1 second is 5 watt seconds.. or 5 Joules change in 1 second. Or in power terms, 550 lbs will be lifted 1 foot, in 1 second for 1 hp. that 5 watt motor is .07 HP... that's 38lbs 1ft in 1 second. now, if you want to lift a huge weight like 38,000lbs, you would be able to move it 1/1000 of a foot in 1 second. (with the proper gearing for the motor reducing its max HP RPM / some gear ratio to give this linear speed)

hope that helps

the helicopter hovers and is doing no work, but is very inefficient because its still using energy to turn the rotors. that power is going up in moving and accelerating the air mass around the rotors . similar to a person leaning on a wall... you can get tired pushing, and nothign happens... no work is done, but you get tired, why? blood flow, cells are using food to contract muscles, heart uses energy to pump the blood and lungs to breath the air. in the end, no work is done mechanically, but energy is used to great the balance of fore on to the wall as the walls force acts back.
 
  • #21
MrAnchovy said:
And that's exactly what does happen - the motor cannot provide enough FORCE to overcome the weight of the load; there is no movement so no work is done.
if there is no movement, the there was no power used, because is the rate of doing work...and since work is force x distance, if you don't do any work, you didnt require any power . the motor can certainly produce enough force to lift any weight with the proper gearing as long as the .5watts is net output, after the gearing efficiency losses. again, as i posted above... you just do the basic calculaion of how much power is available, and find whatever the weight, find the distance it can be moved in 1 second. it willl be some value.. might be small, but it willl be something IF there is .5watts to utilize.
 
  • #22
The helicopter example is not a good one and not applicable. The helicopter is making no use of mechanical advantage (lever). If I place a 1000 lb load at one end of a lever offset from a fulcrum one foot, I have a 1000 foot pound force to over come. a lever on the opposite side of the fulcrum with say 10 feet of length will require 100 lbs force to lift the 1000 foot pounds. WEIGHT X ARM (feet) = MOMENT OF FORCE (foot Pounds). To use even smaller weights to effect the lift I merely need to increase the length of the lever proportionally. A simple lever of course would run into problems with area available and a need to lift the weight say maybe 50 feet instead of one foot. So the use of a block and tackle or geared transmission would be appropriate. Finding the right gear ratio is similar to that of the simple lever. In either case I am using a force multiplier to do the work with much reduced input force.
 
  • #23
Capn'Tim said:
The helicopter example is not a good one and not applicable. The helicopter is making no use of mechanical advantage (lever).
I agree that a helicopter is a poor example. That is not because there is can be no mechanical advantage (there can be) but because the mechanical advantage is not easily computed. Fluid mechanics is messy. The mechanical advantage in the case of a helicopter is in the distinction between lift and drag. You can get more vertical lift force from a wing than you expend in horizontal force to defeat drag. In principle, the ratio can be made arbitrarily high. In practice, however, there are serious physical limitations.
 
  • #24
I agree. Mechanical advantage is a matter of perspective. Helicopters have their uses that provide benefits and resolve specific needs. However the most simple, low cost and economical methods of solving problems wins out. The main reason I said it was not applicable is one of efficient use of energy. The basic concept of a lever is used even within the helicopter itself within it's transmission to translate engine output to rotor rotation and even the tail rotor to arrest the tendency of the helicopter to rotate about it's vertical access.The concept of the lever is a basic component within nearly all machines just as is the wheel. Best regards!
 
  • #25
MattRob said:
then I end up with the absurd result that a small, thumb-sized, say, P = .5 Watt motor can be used in a crane to lift a 1,000-kilo elevator to the top of a skyscraper, given enough time

Playing with the numbers for a moment... They'll get us to where the absurdity comes in...
Lifting a 1000 kg elevator one meter requires 10,000 Joules. A .5 watt motor will need 20,000 seconds to do that much work (that's about 5.5 hours) so we would be lifting the elevator at a rate of .05 mm per second (about the speed of the tip of hour hand on a small analog clock). Now, let's try to imagine the setup that will do that.

To lift a 1000 kg load, you're going to need something like a 1cm steel cable (real elevators use more and much beefier cables, but that's because elevator failures kill people so we overengineer). It is very difficult to operate 1cm cable with a spool less than about 8 cm in diameter, for a circumference of about 25 cm. Thus, our spool will make four revolutions during the 20,000 seconds that it takes to lift the elevator one meter. Meanwhile, any practical .5 watt motor is going to operate at something like 20 revolutions per second, and will make 400,000 revolutions during that time. So it's all about the gearing: a 100,000:1 ratio will do the trick.

And of course that's where the absurdity enters in. What sort of drivetrain has a 100,000:1 ratio? A series of five 10:1 reduction gears would do the trick... But have you ever seen such a thing? Friction in the bearings and between the teeth would soak up more than .5 watts, so even with no load at all our poor little motor wouldn't be able to turn the gears, it would just stall. And we have the equally absurd picture of gears capable of handling 10mm steel cable under a load of 1000 kg, yet being driven by a thumb-sized motor... That's absurd, and it what's what behind OP's intuition that a small thumb-sized motor can't lift 1000 kg no matter what the equations say.
 
  • #26
Nugatory said:
Playing with the numbers for a moment... They'll get us to where the absurdity comes in...
I would say impracticality, rather than absurdity.

Nugatory said:
To lift a 1000 kg load, you're going to need something like a 1cm steel cable...
You can use hydraulics instead, as already suggested.

Nugatory said:
Friction in the bearings and between the teeth would soak up more than .5 watts
The power used up by friction depends on the speed you operate them at.

All those musings boil down to:

It's not physically impossible, but an engineering challenge which might make it infeasible practically.
 
Last edited:
  • Like
Likes jbriggs444

1. How is power related to lifting mass?

Power is the rate at which work is done, and work is defined as force applied over a distance. When lifting a mass, you are exerting a force against the force of gravity. The power needed to lift the mass is dependent on the amount of work required to overcome the force of gravity, which is directly related to the mass of the object being lifted.

2. What factors affect the power needed to lift a mass?

The power needed to lift a mass is affected by several factors including the mass of the object, the distance it needs to be lifted, and the rate at which the object is lifted. Additionally, the force of gravity, the type of energy used (such as muscular or mechanical), and the efficiency of the lifting mechanism can all impact the power needed.

3. How can you calculate the power needed to lift a mass?

The power needed to lift a mass can be calculated by multiplying the force needed to lift the mass by the distance it needs to be lifted over a given time period. This can be represented by the equation P = W/t, where P is power, W is work, and t is time.

4. How does the angle of the lifting force affect the power needed to lift a mass?

The angle of the lifting force can affect the power needed to lift a mass because it changes the direction in which the force is applied. A force applied at an angle will require more power to lift the same mass than if the force is applied straight up. This is due to the fact that the force needed to overcome the force of gravity is split into horizontal and vertical components.

5. How does the type of energy used impact the power needed to lift a mass?

The type of energy used can impact the power needed to lift a mass because different types of energy have different levels of efficiency. For example, using muscular energy to lift a mass will require more power than using mechanical energy, as the human body is not as efficient at converting energy into work as machines are.

Similar threads

Replies
7
Views
1K
Replies
8
Views
2K
  • Classical Physics
Replies
11
Views
1K
Replies
29
Views
2K
Replies
2
Views
2K
Replies
21
Views
1K
Replies
10
Views
1K
  • Mechanics
Replies
32
Views
3K
  • Introductory Physics Homework Help
Replies
14
Views
875
Back
Top