ShmoopTube

Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.

Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos


Physics Videos 34 videos

Physics: Isaac Newton
33 Views

Isaac Newton. Who was he? Why do we need to know about him? In a physics course, no less? Well, he's only the most famous physicist in history, and...

Physics: The Basics of Trigonometry
35 Views

What are the basics of trigonometry? And why are we learning about this in a physics course? Both good questions. In this video, you'll learn about...

Physics: Unit Analysis and Graphical Data Analysis
36 Views

It's time to make our liters and meters work together. Enough of the bickering, right? In this video, we'll do some unit analysis, covering SI Unit...

See All

Physics: Work and Power 18 Views


Share It!


Description:

What are work and power, when it comes to physics? We'll get into force, energy, joules, watts - all that good stuff.

Language:
English Language
Subjects:

Transcript

00:03

Work and power still physics stuff not how to become a

00:07

supervillain.......

00:17

okay you people welcome to my lair of [Man welcomes people to his lair]

00:20

doom come on every good supervillain has a lair no one takes you seriously if

00:26

you're holding the world for ransom in your dining room and every good

00:30

supervillain has something else power the power to make people do whatever you

00:35

want them to do most the time I just want someone to get me a milkshake but [Supervillain talking and minion appears]

00:38

you know still it takes power to do that now physicists will tell you that making

00:43

someone get you a delicious cold vanilla treat with Oreo bits blended.....

00:48

....According to physics, power is something

00:52

completely different in fact power is related to work now

00:56

I'll be honest work isn't exactly my favorite thing I'm a pretty lazy [Supervillain laying in a hammock]

01:00

supervillain I'm in the Union here but power and work means very specific

01:05

things when it comes to physics so what is work well let's talk about what it

01:10

isn't first of all let's say my wife and I go to the mall to do a little [Villain and wife at the mall]

01:13

supervillain shopping well that's the nice thing about this profession

01:17

you know get to set your own hours she picks out a bunch of things to try on

01:21

and ask me to hold her purse which is cool I'm a modern supervillain totally [Man holding wifes purse]

01:26

comfortable with my masculinity but honestly this thing weighs a ton what

01:30

does she carry in here gold bars well after 10 minutes my shoulder is aching

01:34

when she comes back with her selections I tell her how much work it was holding

01:38

this dead weight but since she's all scientific she's happy to tell me that I [Wife appears with lots of clothes]

01:43

did no work at all why because I just stood there not moving just a man

01:48

wearing a man bag see work in the physics dictionary requires movement to

01:54

put it precisely work as a force being applied which causes an object to move a

01:58

distance in the direction of that force in fact that's the whole equation really

02:02

work equals force times distance and it's important to point out that while [Work equation example]

02:08

forces of vector quantity work is a scalar

02:11

quantity since work is all about force applied over distance and that distance [Woman pushing a box]

02:15

is in the direction of that force we don't have to include another

02:19

directional component to work the direction is already baked into the cake

02:23

so to speak mmm cake right so force is measured in Newtons as always and

02:28

distance is measured in good old meters and it's important to really understand

02:33

that whole in the direction of force thing... Yoda knows what I'm talking about [Yoda appears]

02:37

imagine you've got your hand open with a book resting on it or don't imagine it

02:42

go grab a book and let's do some real science if you raise your hand up the

02:46

book moves upward you're applying an upward force the movement is in the [Book floating]

02:49

direction of that force and what do you know you're doing work on the book well

02:53

the work is coming directly from your arm/hand but in the same scenario

02:59

what happens when you move the book from left to right is your hand still doing [Supervillain moves book left and right]

03:03

work on the book well let's ask another question if friction stopped existing

03:08

while you were waving this book around in the air would the book stay in your

03:12

hand no your hand would slide right under it the book would fall down and [book falls to the floor]

03:17

gravity would work its way right down on your big toe when the books resting on

03:22

your palm and you're moving it laterally the force that's being applied actually

03:26

comes from friction so the chemical energy from your body isn't creating the

03:31

force that's working on the book the work is coming from friction well that

03:37

can be a little tricky to understand even from a super genius supervillain

03:40

like me so take your time to understand it go on hit the pause button and wave a [Minions waving books in a room]

03:43

book around I don't mind alright we'll work is the transfer of energy from one

03:47

place to another when you lift your cat off the ground you're taking chemical [Supervillain picks up a cat]

03:53

energy from your body and changing it into gravitational potential energy and

03:57

when that cat wiggles free and drops to the ground while gravity works on the

04:01

ungrateful feline changing the potential energy into kinetic energy, because of

04:07

this relationship to energy work is measured using the same units as energy

04:11

joules.. now let's talk about my favorite subject power but we're talking about

04:17

boring old physics power not fun exciting world domination [Supervillain discussing power]

04:20

- in terms of physics power is the rate at which work is done just as speed is

04:26

measured in miles per hour - power is measured in work per second.. here's the

04:31

equation for it power equals work divided by time and you might be saying

04:35

to yourself what is the unit for power and you'd be absolutely correct okay

04:41

not as in WHAT but a WATT... supervillains can crack jokes were not

04:47

always uptight psychopaths bent on destruction with an eyepatch

04:51

a watt equals one joule per second and it's a measure of energy transfer so if [example of 1 watt equivalent to 1 joule of energy]

04:56

you have a light bulb that's labeled 30 watts well that means every second that

05:01

light bulb is turned on it's converting 30 joules of electrical energy into [light bulb turns on]

05:06

light energy and heat well that can add up if you leave the lights on all day

05:10

but there's probably a lot of stuff in your house that uses way more power your

05:15

microwave might use 700 watts or it might use way more... Your hairdryer

05:21

well like chances are that thing uses over 1500 watts that's why I let my hair [Girl blow-drying her hair]

05:27

air dry I may be evil but I'm still environmentally conscious okay so I'm in

05:32

my lair of doom trying to figure out what to watch on Netflix when one of my

05:37

hench women comes in wheeling the evening cheese cart yeah when you're a [hench woman wheels in cheese cart]

05:42

supervillain you can just tell people to bring you a cart full of cheese this

05:46

line of works looking better and better huh when henchy here pushes the cart

05:50

some of the force pushes down and some of it pushes horizontally in the

05:55

direction of motion in fact my sensors detect that the vertical component of

06:00

the force equals 30 Newtons and the horizontal force is 40 Newtons if she [horizontal and vertical force of the cheese cart appears]

06:06

pushes the cart for 20 meters along a flat surface how much work is done? well

06:11

look among the potential jobs you could have working for a guy like me cheese

06:15

cart pushers a pretty sweet gig but there's definitely work involved let's

06:19

do a little diagram for this setup we've got a distance 20 meters and two amounts

06:23

of force F sub y which is 30 Newtons and F sub X which is 40 Newtons and of

06:28

course we've got our work formula which equals force times distance

06:32

which force do we use though do we add them together get an

06:36

average flip a coin well the crucial factor here is that work is a force [Supervillain flips a coin and work definition appears]

06:40

applied over a distance in the direction of motion our motion is along the x axis

06:45

so that's the force we'll use to find the work we just have to multiply the

06:50

distance times that force which gives us an answer of 800 joules

06:55

well this cheese is delicious keep up the gouda work there Tim....Let's

06:59

go back to light bulb if a 30 watt light bulb is turned on for seven minutes how [Light bulb turned on swinging side to side]

07:03

much energy does it use well wattage is a measure of power which is a measure of

07:07

work per second and work is all about force and distance right but wait I'm

07:12

just flipping a light switch there's not a lot of distance involved in that how [Supervillain switches light switch on and off]

07:16

does this work well electricity moves through circuits and it involves voltage

07:22

and ampules and really we'll get into all that stuff later the important thing

07:26

here is that electricity is zipping through all sorts of wires to get up to

07:30

the light bulb so work is definitely being done even if you don't directly

07:34

see it we've got our power 30 watts and we've got our time seven minutes but

07:40

that little T in our power equation means seconds not minutes so let's [Supervillain discussing power equation]

07:46

multiply that seven minutes by 60 seconds giving us a T value of 420

07:50

seconds now we can multiply each side of the equation by 420 seconds to solve for

07:54

W and when we do that we find that the work equals 12,600

07:59

joules okay it's time to put my evil scheme into action I'm gonna drive out [Supervillain appears outside with minions]

08:04

to the airfield to initiate phase one I'll hop in my electric car and crank it

08:08

up when the cars going thirty meters a second I'll put it in cruise control [Car driving by in cruise control]

08:11

well the engine produces 2,000 Newton's of force how much work is done by the

08:18

engine over a distance of 50 meters and how many watts is the car engine

08:23

expending okay let's figure out what we have here first we've got a force we've

08:28

got a velocity and we've got a distance we want to find work and power...well, work

08:33

should be pretty easy that's force times distance and we've got both of those [force and distance circled]

08:37

right there so let's solve that one real quick the cars work equals 2,000

08:41

Newton's times 50 meters giving us a total of a 100,000 joules thank

08:45

you Tesla...now for the power well that's just

08:48

work / time wait do we have time I don't recall seeing time in our list of

08:54

variables but we do have velocity and we also have a distance so going all the

08:58

way back to the beginning of our physics learning, we had a nice little [Person travelling quickly down a road]

09:01

equation for speed while speed equals distance divided by time but before we

09:07

plug in any numbers we need to do a little presto change-o and rearrange [Supervillain transforms into a magician]

09:11

this equation to solve for time we'll multiply both sides by T then divide

09:14

both sides by S so time equals distance divided by speed and we can get all

09:18

numerical here on you.... 50 meters divided by 30 meters per

09:22

second gives us a time of 1.67 seconds now we can figure out my favorite

09:27

variable sweet-sweet power our work is still a 100,000 joules and we

09:31

divide that by 1.67 seconds giving us a power of 60,000

09:35

watts.. oh that's a lot of the good stuff right here power and work can be a [Car drives by a rocket launch pad]

09:40

little tricky to understand first after all as you sit here processing all this

09:43

physics stuff you might feel a little worn out which makes sense...Learning [Girl falls asleep while studying]

09:47

these concepts can be hard work except according to physics you're not doing

09:51

any work at all sitting motionless may be tiring but that doesn't mean any work

09:55

has been done people and no work means no power even if you spent years

10:00

thinking about physics figuring out how Einstein was a schmuck who got it all

10:04

wrong all that time will still equal zero [Man transforming facial features]

10:07

power....Power is work over time but just in case your mom and dad goes to an

10:13

office and sits in front of a computer all day well don't tell them they didn't [Dad walks in to living room from work]

10:17

do any work might not go over so well...

Related Videos

Jane Eyre Summary
123033 Views

When you're about to marry the love of your life, not many things could stop you. However, finding out that your future hubby is keeping his crazy...

What is Shmoop?
91309 Views

Here at Shmoop, we work for kids, not just the bottom line. Founded by David Siminoff and his wife Ellen Siminoff, Shmoop was originally conceived...

ACT Math 4.5 Elementary Algebra
492 Views

ACT Math: Elementary Algebra Drill 4, Problem 5. What is the solution to the problem shown?

AP English Literature and Composition 1.1 Passage Drill 1
1039 Views

AP® English Literature and Composition Passage Drill 1, Problem 1. Which literary device is used in lines 31 to 37?

AP English Literature and Composition 1.1 Passage Drill 2
683 Views

AP® English Literature and Composition Passage Drill 2, Problem 1. What claim does Bacon make that contradicts the maxim "Whatsoever is delig...