Energy Usage: Power
Almost as an afterthought, I’ve decided to add a short section here to discuss energy usage. According to the definitive article on Wikipedia, a person climbing up a flight of stairs uses energy (or ‘does work’) at a rate of 200 joules per second. Like ‘Work’, the word ‘Power’ has a technical meaning: the rate at which energy is transferred (lost or gained). The unit of Power is the Watt, and to say that something uses one watt of power means that it uses one joule of energy per second. The person climbing the stars draws 200 watts of power from their biological (chemical) energy reserves.
How much energy would our staircase adventurer burn if they climbed a very large staircase for one hour? There are 3600 seconds in an hour, so she would burn a total of 3600*200 = 720 000 joules. That’s 720 kilojoules, or according to Google, 172kcal. This amount of energy could also be expressed as ’200 watt-hours’, which means ‘energy used by drawing 200 watts for one hour (or one watt for 200 hours, or anything in between)’.
Now comes the bit about your electricity bill: what does it mean to say that you used 1200 kilowatt hours over the last month? It means that if you were to use your entire month’s worth of energy in just one hour, you would use energy at a rate of 1200 kilowatts, ie. 1200 kilojoules per second. I think it’s slightly confusing to talk about energy in terms of ‘hours’. It’s a bit like reading a credit card statement saying that you spent 5810 ‘dollar-hours’ (ie, $5810 dollars over an hour, or $1 per hour for 5810 hours). Fortunately, kilowatt hours and joules measure the same thing (energy), so direct conversion is possible: 1 kilowatt hour is 3 600 kilojoules. Nothing to do with time at all.
Examples
One

The Slippery Slope
Back to the unfortunate saga of our moose. Suppose he has been dragged to one side of a steep valley by the hunter. The hill is covered with very slippery ice, and the opposite side of the hill is only half as high. The hunter has had enough of pulling the moose around all day, and decides to dispose of the carcass. [1] At the top of the hill, the moose has nothing but gravitational potential energy. Let’s ignore the chemical energy stored inside the moose (it won’t change), and regard any other types of energy as negligible. The hunter gives the moose a very slight push, sending it sliding down the hill. [2] Half way down the hill, moosie’s gravitational potential has been halved. Most of it has been converted to kinetic energy, but some of it has been lost to the Work done to friction and drag. [3] At the bottom of the hill, all of the gravitational potential has now been converted to kinetic energy. A little more has been lost to friction and drag. [4] Having slid up to the opposite side of the valley (at half the height of the starting position), the moose has regained half of its initial gravitational potential energy. It still has some kinetic energy left over, but even more energy has been used resisting friction and drag.
Two

The Romantic Cruise
Harriet and Kenichi decided to go on a romantic weekend sailing cruise. [1] Initially, their yacht is at rest (no energy). [2] A gust of wind blows against their ship’s sails, doing work on the ship (giving it kinetic energy). [3] The wind stops, and by now the yacht is experiencing a significant drag force as it glides through the water. It is losing energy. [4] The Work due to drag brings the yacht to a stop, and returns it to a state of ‘no energy’. Of course, saying that the yacht has no energy is a bit of a lie in that there will be energy stored in Kenichi’s digital camera batteries, Harriet’s battery powered hair straightener and the couple’s romantic dinner for two. However, those energy sources are ignored as they have no influence on the broad-scale sailing experience.
Recapitulation
Opening this one-way discussion was an explanation that boiled down to energy giving things the ability to push other things. In this discussion, the words ‘push’ and ‘pull’ were synonymous. Push is what initiates movement, and also what brings things to a halt. Whenever energy is mentioned – however abstractly – it should be possible to identify how this concept of push is involved. As a simple example, oil reserves store energy which will eventually allow the push required to move cars, buses, trains, ships and aeroplanes. An ‘energy crisis’ is a big deal because if you can’t push and move things around your country (like food), things pretty much come to a standstill.
In the second round, different types of energy were identified. Each type of energy gives an object the ability to push, and each type arises from different circumstances regarding phenomena like gravity, motion, magnetism and electricity. One special case was that of chemical energy, in that it arises not from an object’s situation, but rather from the configuration of electrons. The idea is that to make use of chemical energy, a chemical reaction takes place that liberates energy as push. With this as the exception, a point was made that objects ‘with’ energy are in a physical sense the same thing as they are ‘without’ energy – where as a person with a potato is physically different to a person without a potato.
The types of energy can be generalised into two categories: kinetic (moving) and potential (not moving). Potential energy is real, but it can be hard to identify. Energy is almost always an exercise in perspective and relativity, because energy ‘yardsticks’ are hard to come by.
Work, here a technical term, is energy as it is transferred between systems. To transfer energy (“do work”), you need to push an object, and it has to move through a distance. Just pushing won’t transfer energy: a helicopter parked on top of a skyscraper loses no energy, even as it continues to push down on the building. Only if it were to move, then its energy would change. Work is mathematically defined as the product of force and distance, and then we considered cases where the force applied was not in the same direction as movement. This introduced some mathematical tools like vectors, the dot product and the line integral.
Friction and Drag are two forces that can be experienced when something moves. Friction comes from the continual formation and breakage of molecular bonds, and Drag is due to you running into tiny particles of fluid as you move. I didn’t explicitly point out that these forces, when experienced as an object moves through a distance, constitute Work. Thus energy can be lost as a moving object does Work against friction and/or drag.
Power, another technical term, is how fast energy is transferred. It is measured in Watts (joules per second). Kilowatt-hours, the units of energy as seen on electricity bills everywhere, are directly convertible to Joules. The kilowatt-hour, however, is a large amount of energy of magnitude suited to measuring electricity consumption.
The End
Well, I think that’s enough for now. Please let me know if I’ve left you in a state of confusion, dear reader. What’s been discussed represents a Classical view of energy – in other words, energy as experienced on scales greater than that of the atom but less than that of the galaxy. Modern physics shows that things behave differently on very small and very large scales, and as such has developed concepts such as quantisation of energy and mass-energy equivalence. Un-be-liev-able! So when you think about it, the only thing that ends here is Cosmospostman’s Introduction to Energy.








