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Power Simplified Revision Notes

Revision notes with simplified explanations to understand Power quickly and effectively.

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14.1.4 Power

Introduction

Power measures the rate of doing work or the rate at which energy is transferred. For example, a more powerful engine can do the same amount of work faster or perform more work in the same amount of time.

Key Formulae for Power

Average Power:

Power=Work doneTime taken=Fdt\text{Power} = \frac{\text{Work done}}{\text{Time taken}} = \frac{Fd}{t}

where:

  • FF is the force (N\text{N})
  • dd is the displacement (m\text{m})
  • tt is the time (s\text{s})

Instantaneous Power:

Power=Force×Velocity\text{Power} = \text{Force} \times \text{Velocity}

where:

  • FF is the force acting along the motion (N\text{N})
  • vv is the velocity of the object (ms1\text{ms}^{-1})

Units of Power

The unit of power is the watt (WW), where:

1W=1J/s1 \, \text{W} = 1 \, \text{J/s}

Other units include:

Kilowatt (kWkW): 1kW=1000W1 \, \text{kW} = 1000 \, \text{W}

Horsepower (hphp): 1hp746W1 \, \text{hp} \approx 746 \, \text{W}

Worked Examples

infoNote

Example 1: Calculating Average Power


Problem

An engine applies a constant force of 1400N1400 \, \text{N} to move a vehicle over 375m375 \, \text{m} in 15s15 \, \text{s}

Find the average power developed by the engine.


Step 1: Use the formula for average power:

Power=Fdt\text{Power} = \frac{Fd}{t}

Step 2: Substitute the values:

Power=1400×37515\text{Power} = \frac{1400 \times 375}{15}

Step 3: Calculate:

Power=525,00015=35,000W\text{Power} = \frac{525,000}{15} = 35,000 \, \text{W}

Convert to kilowatts:

Power=35,0001000=35kW\text{Power} = \frac{35,000}{1000} = 35 \, \text{kW}

Final Answer:

The average power developed is 35 kW

infoNote

Example 2: Calculating Resistance Force and Acceleration


Problem

A driver is operating a car with a mass of 1300kg1300 \, \text{kg} on a horizontal road. The car travels at a constant speed of 72km/h72 \, \text{km/h} using a power output of 20kW20 \, \text{kW}

(a) Find the resistance force acting on the car.

(b) If the engine power increases to 25kW25 \, \text{kW}, find the resulting acceleration of the car, assuming the resistance remains constant.


(a) Find the Resistance Force

At a constant speed, the tractive force provided by the engine equals the resistance force.


Step 1: Convert the speed to meters per second:

72km/h=72×10003600=20ms172 \, \text{km/h} = \frac{72 \times 1000}{3600} = 20 \, \text{ms}^{-1}

Step 2: Use the formula for instantaneous power:

Power=FvF=Powerv\text{Power} = Fv \quad \Rightarrow \quad F = \frac{\text{Power}}{v}

Step 3: Substitute the values:

F=20,00020=1000NF = \frac{20,000}{20} = 1000 \, \text{N}

(b) Find the Acceleration

If the engine power increases, the net force is the difference between the tractive force and the resistance.


Step 1: Find the new tractive force at 25kW25 \, \text{kW}

Ftractive=Powerv=25,00020=1250NF_\text{tractive} = \frac{\text{Power}}{v} = \frac{25,000}{20} = 1250 \, \text{N}

Step 2: Find the resultant force:

Fnet=FtractiveFresistance=12501000=250NF_\text{net} = F_\text{tractive} - F_\text{resistance} = 1250 - 1000 = 250 \, \text{N}

Step 3: Use Newton's second law to find the acceleration:

Fnet=maa=FnetmF_\text{net} = ma \quad \Rightarrow \quad a = \frac{F_\text{net}}{m}

Step 4: Substitute the values:

a=25013000.192ms2a = \frac{250}{1300} \approx 0.192 \, \text{ms}^{-2}

Final Answer:

(a) The resistance force is 1000 N

(b) The acceleration of the car is 0.192 ms⁻²

Note Summary

infoNote

Common Mistakes

  1. Incorrect unit conversions: Always convert speeds to ms1\text{ms}^{-1} before calculations.
  2. Ignoring resistive forces: At constant speed, resistance equals the tractive force.
  3. Confusing average and instantaneous power: Use P=Fd/tP = Fd/t for average power and P=FvP = Fv for instantaneous power.
infoNote

Key Formulas

  1. Average Power:
P=FdtP = \frac{Fd}{t}
  1. Instantaneous Power:
P=FvP = Fv
  1. Force from Power:
F=PvF = \frac{P}{v}
  1. Newton's Second Law:
Fnet=maa=FnetmF_\text{net} = ma \quad \Rightarrow \quad a = \frac{F_\text{net}}{m}
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