How does work...work Peter Bohacek

Transcriber: Andrea McDonough
Reviewer: Bedirhan Cinar

In Physics,

the concepts of work and power help us understand

and explain lots of things in our universe.

Let’s start with work.

Positive work is the energy we put into a system,

and negative work is energy that is transferred out.

Think of positive work as money being added to your bank account,

and negative work as money taken out.

In the metric system,

work and energy are measured in Joules.

As an example, let’s take a beautiful, old, mechanical grandfather clock.

We transfer energy into the clock

when we turn the crank

to raise the heavy metal cylinders inside the clock.

When we do this, we are doing positive work,

adding energy to the clock,

and that energy is stored as gravitational potential energy.

We can calculate the amount of work done by multiplying the force we apply

times the distance over which we apply the force.

To raise the metal cylinders,

we need to apply a force equal to their weight.

That is, equal to the force of gravity

pulling downward on the cylinders.

These cylinders weight 300 Newtons,

which is pretty heavy,

about as much as a small child,

and if we lift them 1/2 meter,

then we do 300 Newtons

times 1/2 meter

or 150 Joules of work.

Power is the rate at which energy is transferred.

When we say rate,

we mean the amount of energy transferred

per unit of time.

In the metric system, power is measured in

Joules per second,

or Watts.

The term Watt goes back to James Watt,

who came up with the concept of horsepower

to measure the amount of power

produced by a typical work horse.

James Watt was a producer of industrial steam engines,

and he wanted his potential customers

to be able to make comparisons

between his steam engines and a familiar quanity,

the power they could get from a working horse.

It was such a useful idea

that the metric system unit for power, the Watt,

is named after James Watt.

Following in James Watt’s footsteps,

let’s compare the amount of power it takes

to run this grandfather clock

to the power we’d need to run

a bright, 100-Watt light bulb.

We can measure the power a person uses

to wind the clock

by dividing the amount of work they did

by the time it took them to do it.

If it takes 1 minute, or 60 seconds,

to lift the weights,

then they are doing 150 Joules

divided by 60 seconds,

or 2.5 Joules per second of work.

They are adding energy to the clock

in the rate of 2.5 Watts.

You would need about 40 times as much

to run a bright, 100-Watt light bulb.

Before we let the clock run,

the energy is stored

as gravitational potential energy of the cylinders.

It’s like your bank account

when you have just deposited money.

But if we let the clock run,

the cylinders slowly move downward.

Energy is leaving the clock.

In fact, when the cylinders get to the bottom,

all the energy that we put in will have left.

So how much power does the clock use?

That is, how many Joules of energy per second leave the clock

if it takes 5 days for the cylinders to return to their original position?

We can figure this out

because we already know how much work we did

when we lifted the cylinders:

150 Joules.

But this time, it took 5 days rather than a minute.

Five days is 5 times 24

times 60

times 60 again

or 432,000 seconds.

So we divide the work done by the time

and find the answer of about 0.00035 Joules per second,

or about 0.35 milliwatts.

That’s a tiny amount of power.

This clock uses so little power

that you could run almost 300,000 clocks

using the same power it takes to run one 100-Watt light bulb.

That’s right, you could run a clock in every house

in a medium sized city with that much power.

That’s a pretty amazing conclusion

and it took knowledge of work

and power to figure it out.

抄写员:Andrea McDonough
审稿人:Bedirhan Cinar

在物理学中,

功和功率的概念帮助我们理解

和解释宇宙中的许多事物。

让我们从工作开始吧。

正功是我们投入系统的

能量,负功是转移出去的能量。

将积极的工作视为将钱添加到您的银行帐户中,将

消极的工作视为取出的钱。

在公制中,

功和能量以焦耳为单位。

举个例子,让我们以一个漂亮、古老的机械落地钟为例。

当我们转动曲柄

以提升时钟内的重金属圆柱体时,我们将能量传递到时钟中。

当我们这样做时,我们正在做正功,

为时钟增加能量,

并且该能量被存储为重力势能。

我们可以通过将我们施加的力乘以我们施加力的距离来计算所做的工作量

为了提升金属圆柱体,

我们需要施加与其重量相等的力。

也就是说,等于向

下拉气缸的重力。

这些圆柱体重 300 牛顿

,相当重,

大约相当于一个小孩的重量

,如果我们将它们举起 1/2 米,

那么我们做 300 牛顿

乘以 1/2 米

或 150 焦耳的功。

功率是能量传输的速率。

当我们说速率时,

我们指的是每单位时间传输的能量

在公制中,功率以

每秒焦耳

或瓦特为单位。

瓦特一词可以追溯到詹姆斯瓦特,

他提出了马力的概念

来测量

典型工作马产生的功率量。

詹姆斯瓦特是工业蒸汽机的生产商

,他希望他的潜在客户

能够将

他的蒸汽机与熟悉的数量进行比较

,他们可以从一匹工作的马身上获得动力。

这是一个非常有用的想法

,功率的公制单位瓦特

以詹姆斯瓦特命名。

跟随詹姆斯·瓦特的脚步,

让我们比较

一下运行这个落地钟

所需的电量和运行

一个明亮的 100 瓦灯泡所需的电量。

我们可以

通过将他们所做的工作量除以他们完成工作

所花费的时间来衡量一个人用来为时钟上发条的力量。

如果举重需要 1 分钟或 60 秒,

那么他们做 150 焦耳

除以 60 秒,

即每秒 2.5 焦耳的功。

他们以

2.5 瓦的速率为时钟增加能量。

运行一个明亮的 100 瓦灯泡需要大约 40 倍的电量。

在我们让时钟运行之前

,能量被存储

为圆柱体的重力势能。

这就像

您刚刚存入资金时的银行帐户。

但是,如果我们让时钟运行

,圆柱体会慢慢向下移动。

能量正在离开时钟。

事实上,当气瓶到达底部时

,我们投入的所有能量都会消失。

那么时钟使用多少功率呢?

也就是说,

如果圆柱体需要 5 天才能回到原来的位置,那么每秒有多少焦耳的能量离开时钟?

我们可以弄清楚这一点,

因为我们已经知道举起圆柱体时做了多少功

150 焦耳。

但这一次,它花了5天而不是一分钟。

五天是 5 次 24

次 60

次 60 次

或 432,000 秒。

因此,我们将所做的功除以时间,

并找到大约 0.00035 焦耳每秒

或大约 0.35 毫瓦的答案。

那是微不足道的力量。

这个时钟的功耗非常小

,以至于您可以

使用与运行一个 100 瓦灯泡相同的功率运行近 300,000 个时钟。

没错,您可以在

具有如此强大功率的中等城市的每个房屋中运行时钟。

这是一个非常惊人的结论

,它需要工作知识

和力量才能弄清楚。