Thursday, August 14, 2008

What will happened to your kinetic energy if you triple your speed?

If our speed increases three times, our kinetic energy increases by a factor of nine, that is, our kinetic energy increases nine times.


The kinetic energy is a form, of mechanical energy and it is associated with the movement of the bodies. All body with mass m, which moves with a speed v, has associated a kinetic energy given by the following expression:


Ek = (mv^2)/2


Where:


m, is the mass of the body.


v, is the velocity of the body.


The kinetic energy Ek1, for the initial velocity v1 is:


Ek1 = (mv1^2)/2


As we see, the kinetic energy is proportional to the square of the speed. If the initial speed v1 increased three times, the final speed v2, will be:


v2 = 3v1


Then the kinetic energy Ek2, for the speed v2, will be:


Ek2 = (mv2^2)/2 = [m(3v1)^2]/2


Ek2 = 9(mv1^2)/2 = 9(Ek1)


So, when the speed increases three times, the kinetic energy increases nine times.

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