Work, Energy, and Power
Overview
This chapter connects ideas from Forces, Dynamics, Kinematics and Vectors.
Instead of analysing motion only through forces and acceleration, many problems can be solved efficiently using energy methods.
Core ideas:
- Work is energy transferred by a force acting through a displacement.
- Energy is a scalar quantity associated with motion, position or configuration.
- Power is the rate of energy transfer.
- Efficiency measures useful output compared with total input.
This page is the main revision hub for the chapter.
Core Ideas
Scalar and Vector Distinction
Be precise.
Vector quantities
- Force:
- Displacement:
- Velocity:
- Acceleration:
Scalar quantities
- Work:
- Energy:
- Power:
- Speed
- Mass
Although work depends on vectors, work itself is scalar.
What Is Work?
Work done by a constant force is defined using the dot product:
Magnitude form:
where:
- = magnitude of force
- = magnitude of displacement
- = angle between and
Unit:
Positive, Negative and Zero Work
Positive Work
Force has a component in direction of motion.
Examples:
- pulling a trolley forward
- gravity acting on a falling object
Negative Work
Force opposes motion.
Examples:
- friction
- drag
- braking force
Zero Work
Force perpendicular to displacement.
Examples:
- centripetal force in uniform circular motion
- carrying a bag horizontally at constant height
One-Dimensional Signed Forms
After choosing a positive direction, scalar signs may be used:
where and may be positive or negative according to direction.
However, remember that force and displacement are fundamentally vectors.
Work as Energy Transfer
Work done on a system transfers energy to the system.
Negative work transfers energy from the system.
Examples:
- Engine does work on car → kinetic energy increases
- Friction does negative work → mechanical energy decreases
Kinetic Energy Overview
Energy due to motion:
where:
- = mass
- = speed
Key facts:
- scalar quantity
- depends on speed squared
- always non-negative
See: Kinetic Energy and Work-Energy Theorem
Potential Energy Overview
Potential energy is associated with position or configuration.
Gravitational Potential Energy (near Earth’s surface)
where:
- measured relative to chosen reference level
Elastic Potential Energy
For a Hooke’s law spring:
where:
- = spring constant
- = extension or compression
See: Potential Energy and Conservative Forces
Work-Energy Theorem Overview
Net work done on an object equals change in kinetic energy:
Equivalent form:
Useful when force acts over displacement.
See: Kinetic Energy and Work-Energy Theorem
Conservation of Energy Overview
Total energy of an isolated system remains constant.
Energy may transfer between stores:
- kinetic
- gravitational potential
- elastic potential
- thermal/internal
- electrical
Mechanical Energy
If non-conservative forces are negligible:
If friction or drag acts:
Some mechanical energy is transferred to thermal/internal energy.
See: Energy Forms and Conservation
Power Overview
Power is rate of doing work or transferring energy.
Also:
Instantaneous mechanical power:
Magnitude form:
Unit:
See: Power and Efficiency
Efficiency Overview
As percentage:
Can use energy or power values consistently.
Real systems are always less than 100% efficient.
Short Worked Examples
Example 1: Work Done by Pulling Force
A force of pulls an object through in same direction.
Example 2: Negative Work by Friction
Friction force acts opposite motion over .
Example 3: Gain in Kinetic Energy
Net work done on object is .
So kinetic energy increases by .
Example 4: Power
A motor does of work in .
Formula Summary
Work
Kinetic Energy
Gravitational Potential Energy
Elastic Potential Energy
Work-Energy Theorem
Power
Efficiency
Exam Relevance
1. Forgetting Work Is Scalar
Do not write vector arrows on or energy terms.
2. Wrong Angle in
Angle must be between force and displacement.
3. Confusing Speed and Velocity
Use speed in:
4. Assuming Mechanical Energy Always Conserved
Not true if friction/drag present.
5. Mixing Energy and Power
- Energy in J
- Power in W
6. Wrong Height Reference
Only differences in gravitational potential energy matter.
Problem-Solving Strategy
Use:
Forces + Dynamics when asked about acceleration
See Dynamics