Chapter 1 - Energy Flashcards

1
Q

What are the different types of energy stores?

A
Thermal
Kinetic
Gravitational potential
Elastic potential
Chemical
Magnetic
Electrostatic 
Nuclear
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2
Q

What is a closed system?

A

A system where neither matter nor energy can enter or leave.

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3
Q

Describe the energy transfer as a person throw a ball into the air?

A

Chemical energy store of the persons arm to the kinetic energy store of the ball and the arm

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4
Q

What is a system?

A

A system is a fancy word for a single object

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5
Q

What happens when a system changes?

A

Energy is transferred

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6
Q

What are closed systems?

A

Systems where neither matter nor energy can enter or leave. The net change in the total energy of a closed system is always zero

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7
Q

What is a kinetic energy store?

A

Anything that is moving has energy in its kinetic energy store. Energy is transferred to this store when an object speeds up and is transferred away from the store when an object slows down

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8
Q

What does the energy in a kinetic energy store depend upon?

A

The objects mass and speed

The greater the mass and the faster it is going, the more energy there will be in its kinetic energy store.

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9
Q

How do you work out kinetic energy?

A

Kinetic energy = 1/2 x mass (kg) x speed (m/s)^2

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10
Q

What does the amount of gravitational potential energy depend upon?

A

It depends on the objects mass, its height and the strength of the gravitational field the object is in

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11
Q

How do you find the change in energy in an objects gravitational potential energy store for a change in height?

A

Gravitational potential energy= mass (kg) x gravitational field strength (N/Kg) x height (m)

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12
Q

What energy change happens with a falling object?

A

Gravitational potential energy store transferred to kinetic energy store

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13
Q

What energy transfer happens when stretching or squashing an object?

A

Elastic potential energy

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14
Q

What is specific heat capacity?

A

The amount of energy needed to raise the temperature of 1kg of a substance by 1kg

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15
Q

What is the conservation of energy principal

A

Energy can be transferred usefully, stored or dissipated, but can never be created or destroyed

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16
Q

What is dissipated energy

A

Energy that is wasted

17
Q

What is power

A

Power is the rate of energy transfer, or the rate of doing work. It is measured in watts.

18
Q

What is one watt equal to

A

One watt = one jewel of energy per second

19
Q

How can you reduce unwanted energy transfers?

A

Lubrication reduces frictional forces

Heating can occur by conduction and convection therefore installation reduces the rate of energy transfer by heating

20
Q

How does lubrication reduce unwanted energy transfer?

A

Lubricants can be used to reduce the friction between the object services when they move. This is so they can flow easily between objects and coat them.

21
Q

How does insulation reduce unwanted energy transfers

A

Insulation traps heat inside

Having thick walls are made from material with a low thermal conductivity traps heat inside homes. The thick of the walls and the lower the thermal conductivity, The slower the rate of energy transfer will be to the building will cool more slowly

22
Q

What are some examples of thermal insulation in homes

A

Cavity walls: made up of an inner and outer wall with an air gap in the middle. The air gap reduces the amount of energy transferred by conduction through the walls.

Loft insulation : reduces convection currents (a cycle where are particles are constantly being heated, rising, cooling and then sinking)

Double glazed windows: they work in the same way as cavity walls

Draught excluders around doors and windows reduce energy transfers by convection

23
Q

No devise 100% efficient. However what is an exception to this?

A

Electric heaters. They are usually hundred percent efficient because all the energy in the electrostatic energy store is transferred to use to thermal energy stores

24
Q

What are the three main fossil fuels

A

Coal
Oil
Natural gas

25
Q

What are the renewable energy sources

A
The Sun
Wind
Water waves
Biofuel
Tides
Geothermal
Hydroelectricityq
26
Q

What are the renewable or nonrenewable energy resources for transport

A

Nonrenewable energy resources:

Petrol and diesel powered vehicles used by most cars use fuel created from oil
Coal is used in some old-fashioned steam trains to boil water to produce steam

Renewable energy resources:
Vehicles that run on fuel biofuels or a mix of a buyer for fuel and petrol or diesel

27
Q

What are the renewable and nonrenewable energy resources that can be used for heating

A

Non renewable energy resources:
Coal is Commonly burnt in five places
Electric heaters which use electricity generated from nonrenewable energy resources
Natural gas is the most widely used fuel for heating homes in the UK. The gas is used to heat water which is then pumped into radiators throughout the home

Renewable energy resources
A geothermal heat pump uses geothermal energy resources to heat buildings
Soda water heaters work by using the sun to heat water
Burning biofuel for your using electricity generated from renewable resources

28
Q

What are the pros and cons of wind power

A

Cons

  • They spoil the view
  • You need about 1500 wind turbines to replace one coal fired power station
  • They can be very noisy
  • Initial costs are quite high
  • They on average produce electricity 70 to 85% of the time

Pros

  • there is no pollution except for a little bit when they are manufactured
  • there are no fuel costs and minimal running costs
  • no permanent damage to landscape
  • renewable energy source
29
Q

What are the pros and cons of solar cells a.k.a. solar panels

A

Pros

  • there is no pollution
  • initial costs are high but after that the energy is free and running costs are almost nothing
  • they are not noisy

Cons

  • You can’t increase the power output when there is extra demand
  • relatively small scale production of energy
  • only works in daytime
30
Q

What is geothermal power and how does it work

A

This is possible and volcanic areas where hot rocks lie quite near to the surface.
Completely free energy that’s reliable and does very little damage to the environment
Used to generate electricity or heat buildings directly
The main drawbacks with your thermal power are that there aren’t very many suitable locations for power plants and that the cost of building a power plant is often high compare to the amount of energy it produces

31
Q

What are the pros and cons of hydroelectric power

A

Pros
- it can provide an immediate response to an increased amount of electricity
- there no fuel costs and minimal running costs
- useful way to generate electricity on a small scale in remote areas
No pollution

Cons
- big impact on the environment Due to the flooding of the valley. This rocks and vegetation which releases methane CO2 and possible loss of habitat for some species

32
Q

What are biofuels was made from

A

Biofuels are made from plants and waste

33
Q

What are biofuels

A

Biofuels are renewable energy sources created from either plant products or animal dung. They can be solid liquid or gas and can be burnt to produce electricity or run cars in the same way as fossil feels

34
Q

How are nonrenewable energy sources cost-effective

A

While the set up costs of power plants can be quite high compare to other energy resources, the running costs aren’t that expensive. Force of yours the nuclear energy or reliable as there is enough also a nuclear fuels to meet current demand

35
Q

How do fossil fuels create environmental problems

A

Call, oil and gas release CO2 into the atmosphere when they’re burnt. The CO2 adds to the greenhouse effect

Burning coal and oil also releases sulphur dioxide, which causes acid rain

Acid rain can be reduced by taking the sulphur out before the fuel is burned

Coal Mining makes a mess of the landscape especially opencast mining

Oil spillages cause serious environmental problems affecting mammals and birds that live in and around the area

Nuclear-power is clean but the nuclear waste is very dangerous and difficult to dispose of

Nuclear fuel is relatively cheap but the overall cost of nuclear-power is high due to the cost of the power plant and final decommissioning

36
Q

Has the use of electricity increase or decreased Since the 20th century

A

Electricity in the UK has been decreasing slowly as we get better at making appliances more officiant and become more careful with the energy in our own homes
Most of our electricity is produced using fossil feels and from nuclear power

37
Q

What is stopping us from using renewable energy

A

Building new renewable power plants costs money

Even if new power plants are built there are still arguments over where to put them

Some energy resources that were in power and not as reliable as traditional fossil feels

Research on improving the reliability across the renewables take time and money