Work and energy in introductory physics
Some of my Physics Education Research Facebook friends have
been questioning the value of some forms of the work-energy theorem in teaching
introductory physics for life sciences (IPLS). Since over the past few years I
have made this theorem an important component of my teaching of mechanics, I
thought I'd take the opportunity to describe how I do it.
I've been teaching a – what? – reformed? reinvented?
renewed? – IPLS course.[1] (link to NEXUS paper) I struggle with the adjective
since our reformation process went beyond usual course reform. We spent a lot
of time communicating and discussing (and arguing) content and approach with
biologists and chemists, and a lot of time researching student responses and
what they brought to the table. This produced a deep philosophical change in
the way we designed and that I teach the class.
We learned that it wasn't just that many life science
students didn't know the required math (perhaps because they hadn't used it in
previous courses) or that they weren't familiar with physics concepts (perhaps
because they hadn't taken high school physics, or if they had, hadn't taken it
seriously). Rather, there were some serious barriers in the way many students
were thinking about the nature of the scientific knowledge they were learning –
epistemological barriers, if you will.
Here are some of the issues that we found:
·
Life science students often saw scientific
knowledge as bits and pieces of memorized knowledge, failing to build a coherent
picture. Although they had learned some heuristics (usually in chemistry), they
had little or no experience with the use of deep and powerful principles such
as those that drive even introductory physics.
·
Life science students often were deeply skeptical
of highly simplified "toy" models. Since life depends in a critical
way on complexity, simplification was seen as "playing irrelevant
games." Few had any experience with the concept of modeling and few
understood the insight that could be derived from studying simplified systems.
·
Even when life science students knew and were
comfortable with the required math, almost all saw math as a way to calculate,
rather than as a way to think about physical relationships. They were missing
not only the skill of estimation and intuitions of scale, they missed being
able to read qualitative implications from equations.
Our course is designed to address these epistemological
issues as well as the issues of choosing content relevant for life science
students (like doing more fluids and including diffusion and random walk). We
try to stress coherence, modeling, and the value of using equations to build
understanding and insight. The work-energy theorem plays a pivotal role in this
structure.
Newton's three laws form the framework for building
understanding of mechanics and building models of physical motion. I treat the
three laws [2] as the basic structure. Any analysis of a particular motion
requires a model – a choice of what we are going to treat as
"objects" and how we are going to model their interactions. We use
the method of System Schema [3] as a tool for analyzing systems and building
models. This is a pre-requisite to drawing free-body diagrams. Interactions are
two-way connecting a pair of objects. When the focus is on one object the
interaction is realized as a force. By Newton's third law, the forces on either
end of an interaction are equal and opposite. This is the tool that focuses
student attention on the modeling character of each system considered.
Newton's second law tells how an object responds to the
forces it feels. If the forces are not balanced (cancel out), the object
accelerates – changes its velocity according to the rule:
Acceleration = (Sum
of the forces)/(mass of the object)
This is a vector law, so forces are requires to change
either the object's speed or the direction of its motion.
This naturally leads to the question:
If
I only care about the change in an object's speed and not its direction,
what does Newton's second law tell me?
what does Newton's second law tell me?
It's pretty easy to figure out how to do this, at least in
principle. Forces that are in the same direction as the motion tend to speed it
up, forces that are in the opposite direction of the motion tend to slow it
down, and forces that are perpendicular to the motion tend to change its
direction. So to consider only the speed, we multiply Newton's second law by a
small displacement along (or against) the direction of motion. After a little
simple algebra (no calculus needed), we get the one-body work-kinetic energy
theorem:[4]
The change in an
object's kinetic energy = work done on it by the sum of all the forces it feels
Or as an equation, this is written
Δ(1/2 mv2)
= Fnet.Δr
(Bold here indicates a vector.)This law is not particularly
useful by itself unless it is used in connection with the System Schema so one
can see that it helps to provide clear and simple answers to two rather subtle
questions:
·
Why is there such a thing as "potential
energy" but no such thing as "potential momentum"? The
impulse-momentum theorem and the work-energy theorem look very similar.
·
Why do we sometimes treat potential energy as
belonging to a single object (e.g., the gravitational PE, mgh) but sometimes treat it as belonging to a pair of objects
(e.g., the PE between two electric charges, kqQ/r).
To answer the first, let's consider the impulse-momentum
theorem in contrast to the work-energy theorem written above:
Δ(mv) = FnetΔt
If we consider a system with two objects interacting, since
they interact for the same amount of time, and since the forces they exert on
each other are equal and opposite (by Newton 3), they change each other's
momenta in equal and opposite ways. This means that if we add together the
impulse-momentum theorems for the two objects, their momentum changes will cancel.
We can then see easily see what the conditions are for momentum conservation to
hold. (All the other forces acting on the two objects have to cancel.)
For the work-energy theorem, things are a bit difference. If
we consider a small time interval when the two objects are interacting, their
time intervals are the same, but the distances that they move do not have to
be. Therefore, if we add together the work-energy theorems for two interacting
objects, even if there are no other forces acting on them, the work terms for
the two objects do not have to cancel. And we can easily see that the extract
term is the force dotted into the change in the relative separation of the two
objects.
This extra term is why we introduce a potential energy (but
not a potential momentum). And it makes clear that the potential energy belongs
to the interaction between the two objects.
It also helps us understand when we can treat the PE as
belonging to a single object rather than to a pair of objects. Since the
momentum changes of the two objects are the same, its easy to find that the KE
change of each object is Δ(p2/2m). If one object is much larger than the other, the KE change (and
therefore the PE) can be totally assigned to the lighter object. This is why
the gravitational PE of an object on the earth's surface can be assigned to the
object, and why, in an atom or molecule, the electric PE if the interaction of
an electron and a nucleus can be assigned to the electron and we can talk about
"the PE of the electron."
These are nice results, if abstract. But I like the
work-energy theorem for more reasons. Here are three:
·
When we have a situation where there one of the
interacting objects is much larger than the other, there are a lot of nice
examples where one can write energy conservation and create equations relating
position and velocity. This gives the students good practice with using
manipulating symbolic equations and interpreting the result.
·
It can be used to generate other relations and
show the relation between other principles that are often treated as
independent.
·
If provides the link between the fundamental
concepts of force and energy, building another powerful coherence.
The first doesn't need much elaboration, but I was a bit
surprised at the second. I knew in principle the power of the work-energy
theorem, but it wasn't until I included a substantial discussion of fluids in
my class that I realized how cool it was. The work-energy theorem, when applied
to a bit of fluid in a pipe easily reduces to:[5]
·
The dependence of pressure on depth and the
related Archimedes' principle (by assuming no motion and only gravitational and
pressure forces)
·
Bernoulli's principle (by assuming no resistive
forces)
·
The Hagen-Poiseuille equation (by assuming
resistive force but no gravitational change)
It can also be used to generate new equations, such as a
modified H-P equation for fluids flowing vertically in a tree.
Of course, each of these can be derived from forces as well,
but tying everything to work-energy and thereby back to forces and Newton two
emphasizes the coherence of the whole structure and the reliance on powerful
overarching principles.
I've seen this work with my students. They all come in
knowing that "energy is the ability to do work," but for most, these
are just words. Once we've gone through the work-energy theorem they begin to
be able to translate forces into work.
My favorite specific example of this occurred in an
interview done with Carol, a student in the class's second term. We had
completed a discussion of free energy and done a recitation analyzing the
separation of oil and water and the formation of lipid cell membranes. The
result is somewhat counterintuitive, since it is actually pretty easy for
students who have taken chemistry to see that the interaction (electric
attraction) between water and oil molecules is stronger than the interaction
between two oil molecules. So why does oil and water separate? Why do lipid
membranes form?
In the interview, Carol answered the question by referring
to the equation for the Gibb's free energy:
ΔG
= ΔH – TΔS
As all biology and chemistry students know, Gibb's free
energy is what drives chemical reactions. Spontaneous reactions go to a lower
free energy. (Here, H is the
enthalpy, which, for this discussion, is equivalent to the internal energy.)
She said (paraphrasing), "The force between the
molecules goes into the work which creates potential energy. That goes into the
H term since it's energy. Since it's
attractive, that tends to make the H
lower for the separated oil molecules. But the other term competes. It comes
from the losing of the opportunities for the water molecules to interact. In
this case, that term wins."
I've seen many students reason like this and it makes me
happy. They are using equations to reason with qualitatively and bringing
together the idea of forces and energy, building an overall coherence and
reasoning from principle.
The single-particle work-energy theorem is easy to think
about and reason qualitatively and quantitatively with. This is why I like it
and why I make it a central element of my IPLS class.
[1] NEXUS/Physics: An interdisciplinary repurposing of physics for
biologists, E. F. Redish, C. Bauer, K. L. Carleton, T. J. Cooke, M.
Cooper, C. H. Crouch, B. W. Dreyfus, B. Geller, J. Giannini, J. Svoboda Gouvea,
M. W. Klymkowsky, W. Losert, K. Moore, J. Presson, V. Sawtelle, K. V.
Thompson, C. Turpen, and R. Zia, Am. J. Phys. 82:5
(2014) 368-377.
[2] I actually introduce a "zeroth law" – that every
object responds only to forces it feels and only at the instant it feels them.
While this might seem trivial to an experienced physicist, a significant
fraction of the errors that introductory students make are a violation of this
law.
[3] V.
Sawtelle & E. Brewe, System Schema Introduction, NEXUS/Physics; L.
Turner, System Schemas, Am. J. Phys. 41:9 (2003) 404.
[4] E.
Redish, Kinetic Energy and the Work-Energy Theorem, NEXUS/Physics
[5] E.
Redish, The Work-Energy Theorem in Fluids, NEXUS/Physics