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adjurovich
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I think I almost understood it. The last question I will ask is: if the energy coming from external work is stored in the system as potential energy. What happens to the energy from work of gravity?Mister T said:Yes. It's the notion that mechanical work can be generalized to a complete understanding of energy transfers. It cannot. The concept of internal energy must first be introduced. Later it can be followed by heat and the 1st Law of Thermodynamics.
This was one of the great intellectual accomplishments of the 19th century and led to what we now call the conservation of energy.
And that's almost correct. The energy a system has due to the relative position of its constituents. There are other textbooks that do this correctly, but they are in the minority.
It is incorrect because you are using mechanical work to draw conclusions about the more general concept of energy.
It goes into increasing the potential energy of the system. It comes from the person doing the lifting.
Development of energy concepts in introductory physics courses
Arnold B. Arons
Citation: Am. J. Phys. 67, 1063 (1999); doi: 10.1119/1.19182
View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1119/1.19182
View Table of Contents: http://ajp.aapt.org/resource/1/AJPIAS/v67/i12
Published by the American Association of Physics Teachers