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Energy transfers

Systems and stores

can remain in the same store for millions of years or sometimes just for a fraction of a second. There are energy transfers going on all the time - whenever a changes there is a change in the way some or all of the energy is stored.

Examples of energy transfers include:

Image gallerySkip image gallerySlide 1 of 3, Boat suspended from column, swings in circular arc. Highest point: no kinetic energy, max gravitational potential energy. Lowest point: max kinetic energy, minimum gravitational potential energy., A swinging pirate ship ride at a theme park Kinetic energy is transferred into gravitational potential energy

Transferring energy

In each of these examples, energy is by one of the following four types of energy transfer:

  • mechanical work - a force moving an object through a distance
  • electrical work - charges moving due to a
  • heating - due to temperature difference caused electrically or by chemical reaction
  • radiation - energy transferred as a wave, eg light and infrared - light radiation and infrared radiation are from the sun

Doing 'work' is the scientific way of saying that energy has been transferred. For example, a grazing cow, a firing catapult and a boiling kettle are all doing 'work', as energy is being transferred.

Energy flow diagrams

Diagrams can be used to show how energy is transferred from one store to another. Two examples are the transfer diagram and the Sankey diagram.

Transfer diagrams

In transfer diagrams the boxes show the and the arrows show the .

For example, a transfer diagram for a child at the top of a slide may be:

Energy transfer diagram of a child on a slide

Gravitational energy stored in the child at the top of the slide is transferred as mechanical work done to speed up and to do work against friction. The result of this is a shift of energy from to kinetic energy and internal energy (raising the temperature of the child and the slide).

Sankey diagrams

Sankey diagrams start off as one arrow that splits into two or more points. This shows how all of the energy in a system is transferred into different stores.

Sankey diagram of a child on a slide

Sankey diagrams are really useful when the amount of energy in each of the energy sources is known. The width of the arrow is drawn to scale to show the amount of energy.