AP Physics C Mechanics Unit 3 Notes: Understanding Power in Work–Energy Systems

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25 Terms

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Power

The rate at which work is done or energy is transferred/transformed; tells “how fast” energy is delivered.

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Average Power

Work (or energy change) over a time interval: P_avg = W/Δt = ΔE/Δt.

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Instantaneous Power

Power at a moment in time, defined by a derivative: P = dW/dt = dE/dt.

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Watt (W)

SI unit of power: 1 W = 1 J/s = 1 N·m/s.

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Horsepower (hp)

Common non-SI unit of power: 1 hp ≈ 746 W.

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Work–Time Graph Interpretation

On a W vs. t graph, instantaneous power is the slope: P = dW/dt.

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Energy–Time Graph Interpretation

On an E vs. t graph, power is the slope: P = dE/dt.

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Power–Time Graph Interpretation

On a P vs. t graph, the area under the curve is work/energy transferred: W = ∫P dt.

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Differential Work

Infinitesimal work by a force over displacement: dW = F⃗ · d r⃗.

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Force–Velocity Power Relation

Instantaneous power delivered by a force: P = F⃗ · v⃗.

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Dot Product (in Power)

Only the component of force parallel to velocity contributes: P = Fv cosθ.

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Negative Power

Occurs when a force component is opposite the motion (cosθ < 0); the force removes mechanical energy (e.g., braking, friction).

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Zero Power with Perpendicular Force

If force is perpendicular to velocity (θ = 90°), then P = 0 even if the force is large.

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Centripetal Force Does No Work (Uniform Circular Motion)

In uniform circular motion, centripetal force is perpendicular to velocity, so it does zero work and delivers zero power.

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Work–Energy Theorem

Net work equals change in kinetic energy: W_net = ΔK.

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Net Power and Kinetic Energy

Net power equals the rate of change of kinetic energy: P_net = dK/dt.

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Translational Kinetic Energy

K = (1/2)mv^2 (for constant mass m).

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Power in 1D Translational Motion

For motion along the velocity direction with constant m: Pnet = dK/dt = mv a, consistent with P = Fv and Fnet = ma.

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Rotational Mechanical Power

Instantaneous power in rotation: P = τω (torque times angular speed).

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Rotational Kinetic Energy

K_rot = (1/2)Iω^2.

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Net Rotational Power

Net rotational power equals the rate of change of rotational kinetic energy: Pnet = dKrot/dt.

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System Boundary (Power Accounting)

Power is energy per time crossing a chosen system boundary via external forces; changing the system changes what counts as “external” power.

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Sum of Powers from External Forces

If multiple external forces act, net power adds: Pnet = Σ(F⃗ext · v⃗).

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Efficiency (η)

Ratio of useful output power to input power: η = Pout/Pin (dimensionless, often a percent).

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Constant Power Acceleration (Frictionless)

With constant power P applied to mass m starting from rest: v(t) = √(2Pt/m), so speed grows like √t and applied force decreases as F = P/v.