Originally posted by Wasper
Can energy be defined?
Yes
... what is your definition of it?
the root classical definition is "the ability to do work"
"ergon" is Greek for "work"
"en" ergon is the potential for work "in" persons or things or situations or systems
The root classical definiton of energy doesn't fit every situation, you know that there is always some play and flexibility in how people use words----and words are able to GROW in meaning and take on addtional uses.
One variant of the classical definition would be ability to produce some amount of heat. When you bring a moving car to a stop by applying the brakes the energy of the car's motion is converted to heat in the brake-pads or the disks. The car had some amount of ("kinetic" or motion-) energy---some number of joules---and that got converted to the same number of joules of heat.
when regenerative braking in an electric car is used the motion energy is used to generate electricity to charge the battery---it is only partly efficient and some gets turned into heat. But some number of joules of motion-energy gets turned into the same number of joules of electricity and gets stored as chemical energy in the battery.
height is often translatable into gravitational potential energy:
coast down a hill and the graviational potential is turned into
energy of motion, which may be enough to carry you partway up the next hill (so grav. potential becomes kinetic which then becomes grav. potential again)
at any point in these processes you can slam on the brakes and convert the quantity of energy that is in flow from one form to another suddenly into heat. So you can always measure it: say how many joules of heat it is.
or "calories" if you like, or "footpounds" or "kilowatthours" there are a dozen different units for energy but the metric one is joules.
Claiming that there is "no definition" can be marginally justified
because (1) it gets the students' attention and (2) the definition is an open one-----new forms of energy are discovered from time to time, and new processes (like fuel cells) to convert from one form to another, so that one cannot once and for all LIST all the
various forms of energy and all the various conversion formulas.
But I would argue that even tho the definition is open and the usage of the work is somewhat flexible there is still a core idea
which can be clearly explained