Questions tagged [energy-conservation]

The law of conservation of energy, which states that the amount of energy in a system is constant. For questions about Earth's environment, see the climate-science tag instead.

The conservation of energy is a fundamental concept of physics along with the conservation of mass and the conservation of momentum. Within some problem domain, the amount of energy remains constant and energy is neither created nor destroyed. Energy can be converted from one form to another (potential energy can be converted to kinetic energy) but the total energy within the domain remains fixed.
If you take all forms of energy into account, the total energy of an isolated system always remains constant. All the forms of energy follow the law of conservation of energy.

The amount of energy in any system, then, is determined by the following equation:$$U_T=U_i+W+Q$$ $U_T~:$ the total internal energy of a system.
$U_i~~:$ the initial internal energy of a system.
$W~~:$ the work done by or on the system.
$Q~~~:$ the heat added to, or removed from, the system.
It is also possible to determine the change in internal energy of the system using the equation: $~ΔU=W+Q~.$

The law of conservation of energy states that the amount of energy in a system is constant. For questions about Earth's environment, see the tag instead.

Conservation of energy is linked to time-independence by , as how momentum conservation is linked to spatial-independence by the same theorem.

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What happens to the energy when waves perfectly cancel each other?

What happens to the energy when waves completely cancel each other out via destructive interference? It seems like the energy just disappears, but that would violate the law of energy conservation. My guess is that the kinetic energy is transformed…
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Why bother buying efficient lights if you are already heating your house?

Assume I live in a location where at any time of day and any time of year, I need to heat my house. Assume further that I have a room with no windows. In this case, does it make sense for me to buy efficient light bulbs, considering that any…
Mathew
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When I walk down the stairs where does my potential energy go?

When I leave my room I walk down three flights of stairs releasing about $7\,\text{kJ}$ of potential energy. Where does it go? Is it all getting dispersed into heat and sound? Is that heat being generated at the point of impact between my feet and…
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What makes running so much less energy-efficient than bicycling?

Most people can ride 10 km on their bike. However, running 10 km is a lot harder to do. Why? According to the law of conservation of energy, bicycling should be more intensive because you have to move a higher mass, requiring more kinetic energy to…
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Why do travelling waves continue after amplitude sum = 0?

My professor asked an interesting question at the end of the last class, but I can't figure out the answer. The question is this (recalled from memory): There are two travelling wave pulses moving in opposite directions along a rope with equal and…
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Where does the extra kinetic energy come from in a gravitational slingshot?

I read in this answer in this site that the KE a free-falling ball acquires is not originated by the attracting body but that energy was actually stored in the ball when it had been lifted to the height it dropped from. In this way, it was said,…
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Is the total energy of the universe zero?

In popular science books and articles, I keep running into the claim that the total energy of the Universe is zero, "because the positive energy of matter is cancelled out by the negative energy of the gravitational field". But I can't find anything…
user1265
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Why does a ping pong ball bounce higher when it is dropped together with a cup of water?

Setup: an official ping pong ball is floating inside a party plastic cup filled with clean water, which is then dropped from a certain height onto a soft mat. Observation: the ping pong ball shoots up to a height which is much higher than its…
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Why can't energy be created or destroyed?

My physics instructor told the class, when lecturing about energy, that it can't be created or destroyed. Why is that? Is there a theory or scientific evidence that proves his statement true or false? I apologize for the elementary question, but…
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If I'm floating in space and I turn on a flashlight, will I accelerate?

Photons have no mass but they can push things, as evidenced by laser propulsion. Can photons push the source which is emitting them? If yes, will a more intense flashlight accelerate me more? Does the wavelength of the light matter? Is this…
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Why are rockets so big?

I'm curious why rockets are so big in their size. Since both the gravitational potential one need to overcome in order to put thing into orbit, and the chemical energy burned from the fuel, are proportional to the mass, so if we shrink the rocket…
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Why can't I do this to get infinite energy?

I know that I cannot do this because of conservation of energy, so I am looking for an answer as to why this will not work. So by my understanding of Einstein's whole famous $E=mc^2$ thing it is possible to turn matter into energy, and energy into…
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Why doesn't this perpetual motion machine using the buoyant force work?

I realize this isn't possible, but I can't see why not, especially if you change the model a little bit so that the balls simply travel through a tube of water on the way up, rather than exactly this model. Please be clear and detailed. I've heard…
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Why do many people say that virtual particles do not conserve energy?

I've seen this claim made all over the Internet. It's on Wikipedia. It's in John Baez's FAQ on virtual particles, it's in many popular books. I've even seen it mentioned offhand in academic papers. So I assume there must be some truth to it. And…
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What allows a pull-back toy car to drive further than it was pushed?

Imagine you have a pull back toy car. Its back part is on $x_0$. You push it down and move it in the back direction to the point $y$ (not marked): Then you leave the car to move away: Then you mark the final position by $x_1$: Let's say, that the…
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