
Potential Energy is energy stored in a system due to the position or configuration of objects.
Unlike kinetic energy, which depends on motion, potential energy depends on where objects are located relative to one another or how they are arranged.
Potential energy exists only for conservative forces.
A force is conservative if the work it does depends only on the initial and final positions, not on the path taken.
Examples:
For conservative forces, potential energy can be defined.
For a conservative force:
\(W_c=-\Delta U\)
where:
The negative sign means:
Near Earth’s surface:
\(U_g=mgh\)
where:
This expression is valid when ggg is approximately constant.
Higher elevation corresponds to greater gravitational potential energy.
If an object falls:
Potential energy is always measured relative to a chosen zero level.
Only changes in potential energy matter:
\(\Delta U=U_f-U_i\)
The choice of zero does not affect physical predictions.
A stretched or compressed spring stores elastic potential energy.
The spring force follows:
\(F=-kx\)
where:
Potential energy stored in the spring:
\(U_s=\frac{1}{2}kx^2\)
For conservative forces:
\(F=-\frac{dU}{dx}\)
This equation shows that force is related to the slope of the potential-energy function.
A force points toward decreasing potential energy.
Potential-energy graphs provide information about motion.
Important ideas:
Objects tend to move toward stable equilibrium positions where potential energy is lowest.
Often corresponds to unstable equilibrium.
\(F=-\frac{dU}{dx}\)
A steeper slope indicates a larger force.
When only conservative forces act:
\(K+U=constant\)
or
\(K_i+U_i=K_f+U_f\)
Mechanical energy is conserved.
As an object falls:
\(U_g \downarrow\)
\(K\ uparrow\)
Potential energy is converted into kinetic energy.
As a ball rises:
\(K \downarrow\)
\(U_g \uparrow\)
At the highest point:
Compressing a spring stores energy:
\(U_s=\frac{1}{2}kx^2\)
When released, this energy becomes kinetic energy.
Potential energy is stored energy associated with position or configuration.
Gravitational potential energy:
\(U_g=mgh\)
Elastic potential energy:
\(U_s=\frac{1}{2}kx^2\)
Relationship to work:
\(W_c=-\Delta U\)
Key ideas:
Potential energy provides a powerful alternative to force-based analysis and is one of the central concepts in AP Physics C Mechanics.
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