Energy Forms and Conservation
Overview
Energy is one of the most important unifying ideas in physics. It allows many motion and system problems to be solved without tracking every force at every instant.
This page develops:
- common forms of energy relevant to H2 Physics
- transfer of energy between stores/forms
- conservation of energy
- mechanical energy conservation
- losses and dissipation
- choosing system boundaries
This page supports the main hub: Work, Energy and Power
Why It Matters
Energy conservation gives a system-wide method for solving problems where force details may be complicated or unnecessary.
Definition
Energy is a scalar quantity that measures the capacity of a system to produce change through work, heating, radiation, or other transfer processes. The SI unit is the joule.
Common forms in JC Physics include kinetic energy, gravitational potential energy, elastic potential energy, electric potential energy, internal energy, chemical energy, and thermal energy.
Key Representations
Scalar and Vector Distinction
Be precise.
Vector Quantities
- Force:
- Displacement:
- Velocity:
Scalar Quantities
- Energy:
- Work:
- Power:
- Mass
- Speed
- Height
Energy is always treated as a scalar quantity in this chapter.
What Is Energy?
Energy is the capacity of a system to do work or to cause change.
Energy may be:
- stored
- transferred
- transformed from one form to another
Energy is not “used up”; it is transferred or converted.
Forms of Energy (H2 Relevant)
Mechanical Forms
Kinetic Energy
Energy due to motion:
Gravitational Potential Energy
Near Earth’s surface:
Elastic Potential Energy
For Hooke’s law spring:
Non-Mechanical Forms
Thermal / Internal Energy
Microscopic kinetic and potential energy of particles.
Electrical Energy
Transferred by moving charge in circuits.
See Current Electricity Fundamentals
Chemical Energy
Stored in fuels, batteries and food.
Light / Sound
Energy carried by waves.
Energy Transfer vs Energy Store
This distinction helps conceptual clarity.
Energy Stores
Where energy is held:
- kinetic store
- gravitational store
- elastic store
- thermal store
- chemical store
Energy Transfer Pathways
How energy moves:
- mechanical work
- heating
- electrical transfer
- radiation
Principle of Conservation of Energy
Energy cannot be created or destroyed.
It can only be:
- transferred
- transformed
- redistributed
For an isolated system:
Mechanical Energy Conservation
Mechanical energy is:
If only conservative forces act:
Equivalent form:
Useful when friction and drag are negligible.
See Potential Energy and Conservative Forces
When Mechanical Energy Is Not Conserved
If non-conservative forces act, such as:
- friction
- drag
- braking forces
then:
is not constant for the moving object alone.
Some energy transfers to:
- thermal energy
- sound
- deformation
- surroundings
But total energy of the wider system is still conserved.
Choosing System Boundaries
Very important in exam questions.
Narrow System
Consider only moving block:
Mechanical energy decreases if friction acts.
Wider System
Consider block + surface + surroundings:
Total energy remains constant.
Always decide:
What system am I analysing?
Typical Energy Conversion Chains
Falling Object
Gravitational potential → kinetic
Pendulum (ideal)
Gravitational potential ←> kinetic
Spring Launcher
Elastic potential → kinetic
Car Engine
Chemical → kinetic + thermal + sound
Light Bulb
Electrical → light + thermal
Worked Examples
Example 1: Falling Ball
A ball falls , neglect air resistance.
Loss in GPE:
Gain in KE:
Example 2: Rough Surface
A block with kinetic energy slides to rest.
Friction converts energy into thermal energy.
is transferred to internal energy of block + surface.
Example 3: Spring Compression
A moving trolley compresses a spring and stops.
Kinetic energy converts into elastic potential energy:
If losses negligible:
Example 4: Mixed System with Losses
A cyclist brakes while moving downhill.
Possible transfers:
- loss in GPE
- some KE change
- thermal energy in brakes
- sound
Need full energy accounting.
Useful Problem-Solving Method
Step 1: Identify System
Object only? Object + Earth? Whole machine?
Step 2: List Initial Energy Stores
Examples:
- kinetic
- gravitational
- elastic
Step 3: List Final Stores
What changed?
Step 4: Account for Transfers/Losses
Friction? Heating? Sound?
Step 5: Write Equation
Example:
Relationship with Work
Work is a transfer of energy by force through displacement.
Positive work adds energy to system.
Negative work removes energy from system.
Common Exam Pitfalls
1. Saying Energy Is Lost
Better phrasing:
Energy is transferred or dissipated.
2. Assuming Mechanical Energy Always Conserved
Only when non-conservative effects are negligible.
3. Ignoring System Boundary
Different systems give different bookkeeping.
4. Missing Thermal Energy
Friction usually means internal energy rise.
5. Using Wrong Height
Use vertical height difference for GPE change.
Summary
- Energy is a scalar quantity.
- Energy changes form but total energy is conserved.
- Mechanical energy:
is conserved only when non-conservative effects are negligible.
- Friction and drag transfer energy to thermal/internal stores.
- Correct system boundary is essential.