Tags
Language
Tags
October 2025
Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
28 29 30 1 2 3 4
5 6 7 8 9 10 11
12 13 14 15 16 17 18
19 20 21 22 23 24 25
26 27 28 29 30 31 1
    Attention❗ To save your time, in order to download anything on this site, you must be registered 👉 HERE. If you do not have a registration yet, it is better to do it right away. ✌

    ( • )( • ) ( ͡⚆ ͜ʖ ͡⚆ ) (‿ˠ‿)
    SpicyMags.xyz

    Concepts Of Work And Energy In Physics

    Posted By: ELK1nG
    Concepts Of Work And Energy In Physics

    Concepts Of Work And Energy In Physics
    Published 5/2023
    MP4 | Video: h264, 1280x720 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz
    Language: English | Size: 1.00 GB | Duration: 1h 49m

    Work Energy and Power, Different types of energies, potential ehnergy, Kinetic energy, work energy theorem, Power

    What you'll learn

    Understand the concept of work in Physics

    Kinetic energy and solve problems based on kinetic energy

    Work kinetic energy theorem

    Gravitational Potential energy

    Elastic potential energy

    Mechanical energy conservation

    Power

    Requirements

    Knowledge of basic algebra

    Basic Knowledge of Calculus

    Understanding of English

    Description

    Those under 18 may use the services only if a parent or guardian opens their account, handles any enrollments, and manages their account usage. Course on Work Energy and Power is for   learners and students preparing for Advance Placement Physics examination and other college level examination . Also students perparing for various engineering and medical entrance examination can also take up couse. Any underage student or learner must take up the course under his/her parent guidance.Conservation laws play an important role in physics. Such laws assert that somequantity is conserved, which means that the quantity remains constant even whenparticles or bodies suffer drastic changes involving motions, collisions, and reactions.One familiar example of a conservation law is the conservation of mass. Expressed inits simplest form, this law asserts that the mass of a given particle remains constant,regardless of how the particle moves and interacts with other particles or other bodies.In the preceding two chapters we took this conservation law for granted, and we treatedthe particle mass appearing in Newton’s Second Law (ma = F) as a constant, time independent quantity. More generally, the sum of all the masses of the particles orbodies in a system remains constant, even when the bodies suffer transformations andreactions. This conservation law is one of the most fundamental laws of nature. Although we will derive this law fromNewton’s laws, it is actually much more general than Newton’s laws, and it remainsvalid even when we step outside of the realm of Newtonian physics and enter the realmof relativistic physics or atomic physics, where Newton’s laws fail. No violation of thelaw of conservation of energy has ever been discovered.In mechanics, we can use the conservation law for energy to deduce some features of themotion of a particle or of a system of particles when it is undesirable or too difficult to calculate the full details of the motion from Newton’s Second Law. This is especiallyhelpful in those cases where the forces are not known exactly.But before we can deal with energy and its conservation, we must introduce the concept of work. Energy and work are closely related. We will see that the work done bythe net force on a body is equal to the change of the kinetic energy

    Overview

    Section 1: Introduction

    Lecture 1 Introduction

    Lecture 2 Defintion of work

    Lecture 3 Work done by force of gravity and tension with illustrative example

    Lecture 4 Types of work

    Lecture 5 Calculating work from dot product

    Lecture 6 Practice problem 1 on calculation of work

    Lecture 7 Illustrative examples on calculation of work

    Lecture 8 Work done by variable force

    Lecture 9 Calculating work done by variable force

    Lecture 10 Calculating work done graphically and analytically

    Section 2: KINETIC ENERGY

    Lecture 11 Work kinetic energy theorem

    Lecture 12 Work kinetic energy theorem 2

    Section 3: Potential energy and energy conservation

    Lecture 13 Problems based on Potential energy and mechanical energy conservation

    Lecture 14 More problem based on gravitational and elastic potential energy

    Section 4: Power

    Lecture 15 Power

    Lecture 16 Elevator and cage problem

    Students preparing for Physics exam of Advance placement