Energy and Power Energy vs Power Whats the
















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Energy and Power
Energy vs. Power What’s the difference?
Definitions Energy The ability to do work (Without energy no work can be done. . . ) Power The rate which energy is transformed (In other words, how FAST you use energy)
st 1 Law of Thermodynamics Energy can never be created or destroyed Since we can’t make energy. . we have to transform energy from one kind to another Remember the transformation examples we talked about in our last lesson?
Electricity Light + Heat
Chemical Motion + Heat
Power Just to review. . . Power is how FAST energy is transformed from one kind to another.
Some Analogies… If power is the SPEED (rate) we are moving. . . Energy is the TOTAL distance we travel
If a Nike factory makes 1, 000 shoes in an hour, how many shoes do we have after 8 hours? Answer: 1000 shoes/hour x 8 hours = 8000 shoes
If a Nike factory makes 1, 000 shoes in an hour, how many shoes do we have after 8 hours? Answer: 1000 shoes/hour x 8 hours = 8000 shoes
In the shoe example. . . 1. What represented power? 2. What represented energy?
Don’t Forget Units! • Unit of Power is the Watt (W) • 1, 000 Watts = 1 kilowatt Our electricity company charges us in “kilowatthours”
Example: A 100 -Watt Light Bulb If a 100 -Watt light bulb operates for 20 hours. . . 1. How many Watt-hours of energy were transformed into light? 2. How many kilowatt-hours were used?
Example: A 100 -Watt Light Bulb A 100 -Watt light bulb operates for 20 hours 1. How many Watt-hours of energy were transformed into light? Answer: 100 W x 20 hours = 2000 Watt-hours 2. How many kilowatt-hours? Answer: 2000 Watt-hours/1000 = 2 kilowatt-hours
How do I do my “Energy Consumption Worksheet” Homework? 1. Use your Kill-Watt-Meter (or check appliance label) to find Power required to operate each device 2. Multiply the power by the number of hours of operation to find total energy consumed 3. Multiply the hours of operation per day by 30 to find the energy consumed in a month 4. Multiply the amount of energy consumed by the cost of energy [PROVIDE COST OF ELECTRICITY HERE]
Special thanks to Deb Frankel who created the original Power. Point which has simply been adapted