Vibhor said:
I have a doubt regarding the concept of work/energy/power when it comes to car fuel problems .
Isn't the force provided by engine an internal force ? Because if that is true then how does it appear in force balance equations ?
Hello, Vibhor. The term "force provided by the engine" that I used is vague and I probably should have avoided it. In order to make sense of the problem, I assumed that the engine must expend power just to keep the car moving horizontally at constant speed. The reason the engine would need to supply power for horizontal motion might be due to internal friction (in the axles, for example) that would dissipate the translational kinetic energy of the car if the engine was not supplying power. I assumed that the rate at which energy is dissipated internally is proportional to the speed of the car. Thus, you could write this power expended by the engine for horizontal motion as P
H = F
HV
H where F
H has the dimensions of force and is assumed to be a constant.
When going uphill, the engine must supply additional power to account for the rate of increase of gravitational potential energy of the car. So, the total power supplied by the engine while going uphill would be P
up = F
HV
up + mgsinθV
up. Here, it is assumed that F
H associated with the internal dissipation of energy has the same value as for horizontal motion.
For going downhill, P
down = F
HV
down - mgsinθV
down.
The problem can be solved by setting P
H = P
up = P
down (as stated in the problem).
I'm not sure if this was how the problem was intended to be interpreted.
This is what I understand . When a car moves on a road without slipping then there is no net work done on the car . Yet the car accelerates . The internal(chemical) energy of the fuel gets converted in kinetic energy .
I agree. It's like a person standing on a frictionless floor facing a wall. By pushing on the wall, the person can start moving away from the wall. But, the force of the wall on the person does not do any work. The kinetic energy gained by the person comes from conversion of energy stored inside the person into kinetic energy of the person.
But I fail to see how is force provided by engine an external force .
I agree with you that the "force provided by the engine" is an internal force, not an external force. The only external forces acting on the car are the normal force from the road, friction force from the road, the force of gravity, and possibly an external drag force (which I took to be zero in the problem). When the car is traveling at constant speed horizontally with no external drag, then the friction force from the road is zero.