msat said:
... as stated by Newton, every action has an equal and opposite reaction, thus work(?) was extracted in equal but opposite amounts.
The error you're making here is equating force and work. They aren't the same.
Think of propulsion as the airflow exerting a force on the aircraft and the aircraft exerting an equal and opposite force on the airflow. So far so good. But force is not work. In order to get work, we need to multiply the force by the distance travelled. The distance traveled in a given amount of time depends on speed.
Ok, so the aircraft and the airflow are moving at equal and opposite speeds, right? Nope. The aircraft is traveling at a speed that is equal and opposite to the
freestream flow. But the portion of airflow being used to generate thrust is not the freestream - it's being influenced by the engine and/or prop. This portion of the flow is moving faster than the aircraft by virtue of the momentum imparted by the propulsion unit. The faster it's moving, the further it travels in a given time, and the more energy it takes away with it.
So it's possible to have equal and opposite forces without equal and opposite energy transfers (work).
msat said:
I just don't see how momentum and kinetic energy describe similar, but different things.
Rather than thinking of energy and momentum as "similar, but different", think of them as "
related, but different". They really aren't similar. One is a vector, the other is a scalar. One is related to force, the other to work (i.e. - energy transferred). One is linear, the other quadratic.
msat said:
Besides the equation for kinetic energy, is there perhaps a more intuitive way to explain why energy increases with the square of the velocity? Basically, why does doubling the the velocity require 4x the energy?
I can take a run at this. Start by sketching a graph of momentum (mv) versus speed (v): v on the horizontal axis, mv on the vertical. What you'll get is a straight line that passes through the origin (0,0). The kinetic energy is represented on this graph as the area under the curve (line) from v=0 to v=whatever speed you're interested in. Because the curve is a straight line through the origin, the area under it is the area of a triangle: A = 1/2 (base)(height). The base is v, and the height is mv, so KE = A = 1/2 (v)(mv), which reduces to KE = 1/2mv^2.
I'm not sure how much more intuitive I can make it with a forum post. The leap of logic here is accepting that the energy is in fact the area under the curve. This assumption/definition is justified if we dig a bit deeper into the definition and mathematics of work and energy.
You can also think of it this way: momentum is determined from the duration of a force application. Energy is determined from the distance covered during a force application. For a given change of momentum (force applied for a fixed time), the work done increases at higher speeds (given time --> larger distance).