Physics 11 kinetic and potential energy2

AI Thread Summary
A 98N sack of grain is lifted 50m, requiring 4.9x10^3 joules of work, which equals its potential energy at that height. When the rope breaks, the sack has the same amount of kinetic energy just before hitting the ground, demonstrating the conservation of energy principle. The discussion emphasizes that any loss in potential energy translates to an equal gain in kinetic energy. This relationship is illustrated through the analogy of transferring liquid between two glasses, where the total amount remains constant. Understanding this fundamental concept is crucial in physics.
Iceclover
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Homework Statement



A 98N sack of grain is hoisted to a storage room 50m above the ground floor of a grain elevator.
a) how much work was required
b) what is the potential energy of the sack of grain at this height
c) the rope being used to lift the sack of grain breaks just as the sack reaches the storage room. what kinetic energy does the sack have just before it strikes the ground floor?

Homework Equations





The Attempt at a Solution



i got the same answer each time. I got 4.9x10^3 for a, b and c
 
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Me too. Do you know why they're all the same?
 
the work-energy therom?
 
and if an object was falling and was losing 400J of potential energy how much kinetic energy would it gain?
 
funny dude.

OK, for each specific case:
Why does energy needed to lift=potential energy at top?
More basically, why does potential energy at top=kinetic energy at bottom?
 
Iceclover said:
and if an object was falling and was losing 400J of potential energy how much kinetic energy would it gain?

No, no. You tell me. This be basic, basic theorem. Veeeerrrrrrry important. And it is not the Work-Energy Theorem (though \it could be related to it rather neatly).
 
would it gain 400J? i really just don't get this
 
Yes it would be 400J. There's not much to get. The conservation of energy states quite simply that under certain conditions, mechanical energy remains constant. This is written up as E_{mec}=K+U=constant (K is kinetic energy and U is potential energy).

So any loss in potential energy requires an equal gain in kinetic energy, and vice-versa.

The usual analogy is of two glasses and a given amount of liquid. If you pour the liquid from one glass to the other (without spilling), whatever amount one glass loses, the other glass gains.
 
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