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Certainly, because kinetic energy is determined by both mass and speed. If I'm traveling at 1/2 the speed that you are, but I have 4 times as much mass as you have, then our kinetic energies are equal. And for an example in the other direction . . . If my mass is only 1% of yours, but I'm traveling at 10 times your speed, then our kinetic energies are equal. That's how a bullet or a baseball can knock a grown person off his feet. Kinetic Energy = 1/2 (mass) x (speed)2
I think you mean Kinetic energy. Kinetic energy is energy in motion. An example of kinetic energy is playing, jumping or walking. The other energy is called Potential energy. This is energy waiting to be used like a battery.
The reverse is usually done .... Define temperature in terms of KE. The temperature of a body is proportional the the average Kinetic Energy of the particles (molecules or atoms) that make up the body. Can't be done the other way because a car traveling at 60 miles per hour has Kinetic energy which has nothing to do with temperature. The car doesn't care if is 100 degrees or 20 degrees.
Kinetic energy is the energy of motion. Energy cannot be destroyed, but it can be converted into other forms. When you want to get rid of kinetic energy, we normally use a brake, which converts the kinetic energy into heat energy through friction. With some hybrid automobiles, they use "regenerative braking" to convert the kinetic energy of motion back into electrical energy in the batteries.
kinetic
By converting other forms of energy into kinetic.
kinetic energy is energy in the form of motion... in other words a liquid must be moving to have any kinetic energy
Assuming both pieces are traveling at 6m/s, the 4kg mass has a kinetic energy of 72 joules.
You can convert kinetic energy to practically any other type of energy.
Difference is that kinetic energy is the energy of motion and potential is stored energy.
Certainly, because kinetic energy is determined by both mass and speed. If I'm traveling at 1/2 the speed that you are, but I have 4 times as much mass as you have, then our kinetic energies are equal. And for an example in the other direction . . . If my mass is only 1% of yours, but I'm traveling at 10 times your speed, then our kinetic energies are equal. That's how a bullet or a baseball can knock a grown person off his feet. Kinetic Energy = 1/2 (mass) x (speed)2
Temperature is the average kinetic energy of an object.
Windmills transform the kinetic energy of the moving air mass into other energy forms.
I think you mean Kinetic energy. Kinetic energy is energy in motion. An example of kinetic energy is playing, jumping or walking. The other energy is called Potential energy. This is energy waiting to be used like a battery.
I think you mean Kinetic energy. Kinetic energy is energy in motion. An example of kinetic energy is playing, jumping or walking. The other energy is called Potential energy. This is energy waiting to be used like a battery.
The reverse is usually done .... Define temperature in terms of KE. The temperature of a body is proportional the the average Kinetic Energy of the particles (molecules or atoms) that make up the body. Can't be done the other way because a car traveling at 60 miles per hour has Kinetic energy which has nothing to do with temperature. The car doesn't care if is 100 degrees or 20 degrees.
Kinetic energy is the energy of motion. Energy cannot be destroyed, but it can be converted into other forms. When you want to get rid of kinetic energy, we normally use a brake, which converts the kinetic energy into heat energy through friction. With some hybrid automobiles, they use "regenerative braking" to convert the kinetic energy of motion back into electrical energy in the batteries.