Energy Stores & Transfers (Cambridge O Level Physics)

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Dan MG

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Dan MG

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Energy Stores

  • Energy is a property that must be transferred to an object to perform work on or heat up that object
    • Energy is measured in units of joules (J)
    • Energy will often be described as part of an energy system
  • In physics, a system is defined as:

An object or group of objects

    • Defining the system, in physics, is a way of narrowing the parameters to focus only on what is relevant to the situation being observed
    • A system could be as large as the whole Universe, or as small as an apple sitting on a table
  • When a system is in equilibrium, nothing changes, and so nothing happens
  • When there is a change to a system, energy is transferred
    • If an apple sits on a table, and that table is suddenly removed, the apple will fall
    • As the apple falls, energy is transferred

Example of Energy Transfer

apple-table-system

Energy is transferred when the apple is falling - the system is changing

  • Energy is stored in objects in different energy stores

Descriptions of Energy Stores

Energy Store Description
Kinetic Moving objects have energy in their kinetic store
Gravitational Objects gain energy in their gravitational potential store when they are lifted through a gravitational field
Elastic Objects have energy in their elastic potential store if they are stretched, squashed or bent
Magnetic Magnetic materials interacting with each other have energy in their magnetic store
Electrostatic Objects with charge (like electrons and protons) interacting with one another have energy in their electrostatic store
Chemical Chemical reactions transfer energy into or away from a substance's chemical store
Nuclear Atomic nuclei release energy from their nuclear store during nuclear reactions
Thermal All objects have energy in their thermal store, the hotter the object, the more energy it has in this store

Energy Transfers

Energy Transfers

Energy is transferred between stores through different energy transfer pathways

  • The energy transfer pathways are:
    • Mechanical
    • Electrical
    • Heating
    • Radiation
  • These are described in the table below:

 Energy Transfer Pathways Table

Transfer Pathway Description
Mechanical working When a force acts on an object (e.g. pulling, pushing, stretching, squashing)
Electrical working A charge moving through a potential difference (e.g. current)
Heating (by particles) Energy is transferred from a hotter object to a colder one (e.g. conduction)
(Heating by) radiation Energy transferred by electromagnetic waves (e.g. visible light)

  • An example of an energy transfer by heating is a hot coffee heating up cold hands

Energy Transfers Scenario

1--thermal-energy-transfer--new

Energy is transferred by heating from the hot coffee to the mug, to the cold hands 

Worked example

Describe the energy transfers in the following scenarios:

a) A battery powering a torch

b) A falling object

Answer: 

a)

Step 1: Determine the store that energy is being transferred away from, within the parameters described by the defined system 

  • For a battery powering a torch
  • The system is defined as the energy transfer from the battery to the torch, so this is the transfer to focus on
  • Therefore, the energy began in the chemical store of the cells of the battery

Step 2: Determine the store that energy is transferred to, within the parameters described by the defined system 

  • When the circuit is closed, the bulb lights up
  • Therefore, energy is transferred to the thermal store of the bulb
  • Energy is then transferred from the bulb to the surroundings, but this is not described in the parameters of the system

Step 3: Determine the transfer pathway

  • Energy is transferred by the flow of charge around the circuit
  • Therefore, the transfer pathway is electrical

Energy is transferred electrically from the chemical store of the battery to the thermal store of the bulb 

b)

Step 1: Determine the store that energy is being transferred away from, within the parameters described by the defined system 

  • For a falling object 
  • In order to fall, the object must have been raised to a height
  • Therefore, it began with energy in its gravitational potential store

Step 2: Determine the store that energy is transferred to, within the parameters described by the defined system 

  • As the object falls, it is moving
  • Therefore, energy is being transferred to its kinetic store

Step 3: Determine the transfer pathway

  • For an object to fall, a resultant force must be acting on it, and that force is weight, and it acts over a distance (the height of the fall)
  • Therefore, the transfer pathway is mechanical

Energy is transferred from the gravitational store to the kinetic store of the object via a mechanical transfer pathway

Exam Tip

Don't worry too much about the parameters of the system. They are there to help you keep your answers concise so you don't end up wasting time in your exam. 

If you follow any process back far enough, you would get many energy transfers taking place. For example, an electric kettle heating water. The relevant energy transfer is from the thermal store of the kettle to the thermal store of the water, with some energy dissipated to the surroundings. But you could take it all the way back to how the electricity was generated in the first place. This is beyond the scope of the question. Defining the system gives you a starting point and a stopping point for the energy transfers you need to consider.

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Dan MG

Author: Dan MG

Dan graduated with a First-class Masters degree in Physics at Durham University, specialising in cell membrane biophysics. After being awarded an Institute of Physics Teacher Training Scholarship, Dan taught physics in secondary schools in the North of England before moving to SME. Here, he carries on his passion for writing enjoyable physics questions and helping young people to love physics.