Where Does the Extra Energy Come From in a Gravitational Field?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion explores the concept of energy in a gravitational field, particularly how potential energy (PE) changes as one falls towards a dense mass like a neutron star or black hole. It highlights that while gravitational acceleration (g) increases as one descends, the potential energy does not simply decrease but can increase due to the changing gravitational field. The equation E=mgh assumes a constant g, but when g varies with height, integration is required to accurately calculate energy changes. The conversation clarifies that gravitational potential energy can be negative, depending on the chosen reference point, typically set at infinity. Overall, the key takeaway is that potential energy is relative and can be calculated differently based on the context of the gravitational field.
daniel_i_l
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Lets imagine that there is a gravitational field and you are in a position that if you fall a meter your g increases by 2m/s/s (I'm pretty that that's possible). In this case, the more you fall the more P energy you get and you get more K energy. In order for this not to contradict the conservation of energy law, I thought that the extra energy had to do with the gravitational energy, but that also increases. Were does the extra energy come from?
 
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You have potential energy backwards. Potential energy increases as you go up.
 
I know that normally potential energy decreases as you go down because
Ep = mgh and h gets smaller. But in this case h gets smaller as you fall
(Hf = Hi-1), but the g gets bigger (gf = gi + 2) so the total Ep get bigger?
This can happen with a very dense mass were a small change in the H can make an even bigger change on the g (R^2).
 
daniel_i_l said:
Lets imagine that there is a gravitational field and you are in a position that if you fall a meter your g increases by 2m/s/s (I'm pretty that that's possible).

maybe somewhere close to a neutron star or black hole. that's got to be a pretty scary graviational field I'm in if it increases by 20% in the space of a meter! :eek:
 
Thank for the reply, well it doesn't have to be by that much, and even if it was, were did all that energy come from?
 
There's no "extra" energy. The equation E=mgh assumes g=constant. For the case where the factor g changes with h, you will need to integrate. As you drop, h gets smaller and g gets bigger, so the amount of potential energy per unit h increases as you look at a point closer to the 'black hole'.
 
Thanks, could you tell me what the integral is (I'm just curious)
 
I don't have it handy. Maybe someone else does or would like to figure it out, it can't be that tough.
 
The gravitational PE of an object of mass m at a distance R from the center of a spherically symmetric mass M (with radius < R) is:
- \frac{G M m}{R}

This results from integrating \frac{G M m}{r^2} \ dr. (Note that the PE is taken to be zero when m is infinitely far from M.)
 
  • #10
Thanks Doc Al, I was happy to see that resualt cause after Q's reply I worked it out and got to that answer!:smile:
But doesn't that just complicates things more!? According to that equation, E_{p} is inversly related to R, so the closer you get the more Ep you get, not less, that in addition to getting more E_{k} ?
 
  • #11
Don't neglect the minus sign! Gravitational PE gets smaller (more negative) as R decreases.
 
  • #12
How can there be negative energy? Dosen't the (-) just show that we are looking at the energy relative to infinity, what if I'm looking for the potential energy relative to the ground?
How can something be "closer" or "further" from infinity?
Sorry for my misunderstanding Doc Al.
 
  • #13
daniel_i_l said:
How can there be negative energy? Dosen't the (-) just show that we are looking at the energy relative to infinity, what if I'm looking for the potential energy relative to the ground?
Potential energy is measured relative to an arbitrary zero point. (The most convient zero point is at infinity, when considering large distances where the gravitational field strength varies. Near to the earth, one simply uses PE = mgy, choosing any level as zero.) Of course the PE can be negative. If you measure the PE with respect to ground level, what's the PE of a object sitting in a hole?

To find the difference in PE between any two points, plug the distances into the formula. (Compare the PE for R = radius of Earth to the PE for R = radius of Earth + h.) You'll find, as expected, that the PE increases as the object is raised above the ground.
 
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