It was said previously that work is done upon
an object whenever a force acts upon it to cause it to be displaced. Work
involves a force acting upon an object to cause a displacement. In all
instances in which work is done, there is an object that supplies the force in
order to do the work. If a World Civilization book is lifted to the top shelf
of a student locker, then the student supplies the force to do the work on the
book. If a plow is
displaced across a field, then some form of farm equipment (usually a tractor
or a horse) supplies the force to do the work on the plow. If a
pitcher winds up and accelerates a baseball towards home plate, then the
pitcher supplies the force to do the work on the baseball. If a roller coaster
car is displaced from ground level to the top of the first drop of a roller
coaster ride, then a chain driven by a motor supplies the force to do the work
on the car. If a barbell is displaced from ground level to a height above a
weightlifter's head, then the weightlifter is supplying a force to do work on
the barbell. In all instances, an object that possesses some form of energy
supplies the force to do the work. In the instances described here, the objects
doing the work (a student, a tractor, a pitcher, a motor/chain) possesschemical potential
energy stored in food or fuel that is transformed into work. In the
process of doing work, the object that is doing the work exchanges energy with
the object upon which the work is done. When the work is done upon the object,
that object gains energy. The energy acquired by the objects upon which work is
done is known as mechanical
energy.
Mechanical energy is the energy that is possessed by an
object due to its motion or due to its position. Mechanical energy can be
either kinetic energy(energy of
motion) or potential energy (stored energy of
position). Objects have mechanical energy if they are in motion and/or if they
are at some position relative to a zero
potential energy position (for
example, a brick held at a vertical position above the ground or zero height
position). A moving car possesses mechanical energy due to its motion (kinetic energy). A moving
baseball possesses mechanical energy due to both its high speed (kinetic energy) and its
vertical position above the ground (gravitational potential
energy). A World Civilization book at rest on the top
shelf of a locker possesses mechanical energy due to its vertical position
above the ground (gravitational potential energy). A barbell
lifted high above a weightlifter's head possesses mechanical energy due to its
vertical position above the ground (gravitational potential
energy). A drawn bow possesses mechanical energy due
to its stretched position (elastic potential energy).