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Power (physics) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Power (physics)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In physics, power (symbol: P) is defined as the amount P Common symbol(s): of energy consumed per unit time. In the MKS system, the unit of power is the joule per second (J/s), known watt SI unit: as the watt (in honor of James Watt, the eighteenthcentury developer of the steam engine). For example, the rate at which a light bulb converts electrical energy into heat and light is measured in wattsthe more wattage, the more power, or equivalently the more electrical energy is used per unit time.[1][2] Energy transfer can be used to do work, so power is also the rate at which this work is performed. The same amount of work is done when carrying a load up a flight of stairs whether the person carrying it walks or runs, but more power is expended during the running because the work is done in a shorter amount of time. The output power of an electric motor is the product of the torque the motor generates and the angular velocity of its output shaft. The power expended to move a vehicle is the product of the traction force of the wheels and the velocity of the vehicle. The integral of power over time defines the work done. Because this integral depends on the trajectory of the point of application of the force and torque, this calculation of work is said to be path dependent.

Contents
1 Units 2 Average power 3 Mechanical power 3.1 Mechanical advantage 4 Power in optics 5 Electrical power 6 Peak power and duty cycle 7 See also 8 References

Units
The dimension of power is energy divided by time. The SI unit of power is the watt (W), which is equal to one joule per second. Other units of power include ergs per second (erg/s), horsepower (hp), metric horsepower (Pferdestrke (PS) or cheval vapeur, CV), and foot-pounds per minute. One horsepower is equivalent to 33,000 foot-pounds per minute, or the power required to lift 550 pounds by one foot in one second, and is equivalent to about 746 watts. Other units include dBm, a relative logarithmic measure with 1 milliwatt as reference; (food) calories per hour (often referred to as kilocalories per hour); Btu per hour (Btu/h); and tons of refrigeration (12,000 Btu/h).
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Power (physics) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Average power
As a simple example, burning a kilogram of coal releases much more energy than does detonating a kilogram of TNT,[3] but because the TNT reaction releases energy much more quickly, it delivers far more power than the coal. If W is the amount of work performed during a period of time of duration t , the average power Pavg over that period is given by the formula

It is the average amount of work done or energy converted per unit of time. The average power is often simply called "power" when the context makes it clear. The instantaneous power is then the limiting value of the average power as the time interval t approaches zero.
Ansel Adams photograph of electrical wires of the Boulder Dam Power Units, 19411942

In the case of constant power P, the amount of work performed during a period of duration T is given by:

In the context of energy conversion, it is more customary to use the symbol E rather than W.

Mechanical power
Power in mechanical systems is the combination of forces and movement. In particular, power is the product of a force on an object and the object's velocity, or the product of a torque on a shaft and the shaft's angular velocity. Mechanical power is also described as the time derivative of work. In mechanics, the work done by a force F on an object that travels along a curve C is given by the line integral:

where x defines the path C and v is the velocity along this path. If the force F is derivable from a potential, then applying the gradient theorem (and remembering that force is the negative of the gradient of the potential energy) yields:

where A and B are the beginning and end of the path along which the work was done. The power at any point along the curve C is the time derivative
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Power (physics) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In one dimension, this can be simplified to:

In rotational systems, power is the product of the torque and angular velocity ,

where measured in radians per second. In fluid power systems such as hydraulic actuators, power is given by

where p is pressure in pascals, or N/m2 and Q is volumetric flow rate in m3/s in SI units.

Mechanical advantage
If a mechanical system has no losses then the input power must equal the output power. This provides a simple formula for the mechanical advantage of the system. Let the input power to a device be a force FA acting on a point that moves with velocity v A and the output power be a force FB acts on a point that moves with velocity v B. If there are no losses in the system, then

and the mechanical advantage of the system (output force per input force) is given by

The similar relationship is obtained for rotating systems, where TA and A are the torque and angular velocity of the input and TB and B are the torque and angular velocity of the output. If there are no losses in the system, then

which yields the mechanical advantage

These relations are important because they define the maximum performance of a device in terms of velocity ratios determined by its physical dimensions. See for example gear ratios.

Power in optics
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Power (physics) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In optics, or radiometry, the term power sometimes refers to radiant flux, the average rate of energy transport by electromagnetic radiation, measured in watts. In other contexts, it refers to optical power, the ability of a lens or other optical device to focus light. It is measured in diopters (inverse meters), and equals the inverse of the focal length of the optical device. That is power in optics.

Electrical power
Main article: Electric power The instantaneous electrical power P delivered to a component is given by

where P(t ) is the instantaneous power, measured in watts (joules per second) V(t ) is the potential difference (or voltage drop) across the component, measured in volts I(t ) is the current through it, measured in amperes If the component is a resistor with time-invariant voltage to current ratio, then:

where

is the resistance, measured in ohms.

Peak power and duty cycle


In the case of a periodic signal of period , like a train of identical pulses, the instantaneous power is also a periodic function of period . The peak power is simply defined by: . The peak power is not always readily measurable, however, and the measurement of the average power more commonly performed by an instrument. If one defines the energy per pulse as: is

then the average power is:

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Power (physics) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

. One may define the pulse length ratios such that so that the

are equal. These ratios are called the duty cycle of the pulse train.

See also
Simple machines Mechanical advantage Motive power Orders of magnitude (power) Pulsed power Intensity in the radiative sense, power per area Power gain for linear, two-port networks.

In a train of identical pulses, the instantaneous power is a periodic function of time. The ratio of the pulse duration to the period is equal to the ratio of the average power to the peak power. It is also called the duty cycle (see text for definitions).

References
1. ^ Halliday and Resnick (1974). "6. Power". Fundamentals of Physics. 2. ^ Chapter 13, 3, pp 13-2,3 The Feynman Lectures on Physics Volume I, 1963 3. ^ Burning coal produces around 15-30 megajoules per kilogram, while detonating TNT produces about 4.7 megajoules per kilogram. For the coal value, see Fisher, Juliya (2003). "Energy Density of Coal" (http://hypertextbook.com/facts/2003/JuliyaFisher.shtml). The Physics Factbook . Retrieved 30 May 2011. For the TNT value, see the article TNT equivalent. The coal value does not include the weight of oxygen used during combustion, while the TNT number if TNT only.

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