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Energy is equivalent to the work done on a motor. The work done on the motor is multiplied by more than 100% by recycling the energy the motor uses. Why then does the energy in the system appear to be more than one hundred percent?

For instance if a motor is powered from a capacitor with 1 joule of energy in it then the motor has done 1 joule's worth of work.

Yet when the energy is recycled, by pulsing and recovering the energy through the utilization of a collapsing magnetic field, then the motor can now do more work than what it originally could have done if the energy was used only once.

If the work done in the motor is directly related, proportional and equal to the energy that was in the capacitor, then would this mean that the energy has now gone above 100% as well? That is the question.

Any answers would be greatly appreciated. I will remain neutral to any and all answers as I don't consider them right or wrong.

More information and clarification can be found here. I actually figured out the answer for myself and hopefully for others as well here.

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  • $\begingroup$ -1. Unclear. What exactly is your difficulty? All you seem to be asking is whether it is "safe to say" that 1 Watt-second is the same as 1 Joule, without explaining why you think this might not be true. $\endgroup$ Commented Jul 26, 2017 at 19:48
  • $\begingroup$ I have edited my original question to go along with this comment. I am asking this question because of the consequences of reusing or recycling energy in order to perform more work than what would normally be done if the energy is used only once. Still unclear? If so just ask I will try to clear it up even more. Please undo the vote down, it's an honest and valid question. $\endgroup$ Commented Jul 26, 2017 at 19:54
  • $\begingroup$ " but please make sure to stay focused on the original question" It's very simple. Work transfers energy from one system to another. I don't understand your rambling around this fact. $\endgroup$
    – Bill N
    Commented Jul 26, 2017 at 20:55
  • $\begingroup$ What do you not understand about my ramblings? Huh? Do you not read or what? I am saying that you can get more work out of a system by reusing energy repeatedly, therefore get more work than what you normally would if you use the energy just one time, like the motor draining the capacitor away example I set forth. If the work done is equivalent to energy then that would imply that more than 100% energy in a system, if the energy is reused, which we all know is impossible, so you see the merit of the question yet? $\endgroup$ Commented Jul 26, 2017 at 21:06
  • $\begingroup$ There's no need to take offense and be angry here. Your original question was not very clear and it doesn't look like the addition of ~2000 characters did anything to help the case. As it's written now, it looks like you're asking if energy $\to$ work $\to$ energy $\to$ work increases the energy of the system, which (to many of us) seems a trivial no. $\endgroup$
    – Kyle Kanos
    Commented Jul 27, 2017 at 1:15

2 Answers 2

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For the most part, you can ignore the difference between energy and work. They're not quite the same, but they're similar enough that, in my experience, I haven't seen anyone get a wrong answer because they got them confused.

Work specifically is what a force does when there is a displacement in the point of application of that work. In laymans terms, work is what happens when a force moves something. By the Work-Energy principle, the amount of kinetic energy gained by a rigid body is exactly equal to the amount of work done on it.

So by that technical definition, using a capacitor to power a motor which moves an object is doing work, while using a capacitor to power a lightbulb is not because no kinetic energy was added to any object. Instead, that electrical potential energy was converted to thermal energy, which was then radiated as light. In practice, this distinction is not emphasized. In all situations I am aware of (except perhaps exam questions), I could say "the capacitor is doing work, lighting the light bulb," and people would properly interpret what I meant.

The big difference is really that energy is a property of a "thing" while work is a property of a force. This is funny since forces aren't "things," but rather abstract mathematical constructs to make sense of how the world works. Philosophers may squabble over this, but I've never found any practical issue caused by the misuse of work vs. energy. People generally use the correct word in the correct places.

So, to answer your final question, the only reason 1W of work done over 1 second is not quite equivalent to 1J of energy is simply because work is associated with a force, while energy is associated with a thing. However, practically speaking, I've never seen any reason why you would get in trouble thinking of them as equivalent.

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The short answer is yes. The long answer is somewhat more subtle. It is true that work is dimensionally equivalent to energy (their units are the same). Therefore, you could always say that work represents energy.

The subtility lies in the fact that there are different forms of energy. If I lift a stone of $0.1$ g $1$ m above the ground, it will have gained approximately $1$ Joule of energy (the gravitational potential energy is $mgh$, with $m$ the mass, $g$ the earth's gravity field ($9.81 m /s^2$), and $h$ the height). However, due to air friction, I will have performed slightly more work than that (although the difference would be negligible). Also, my body will have used more energy than the amount of work I did, because the human body definitely does not have a $100 \%$ efficency when converting energy into this kind of work. Where, then, did the excess energy go?

The answer is heat. Heat is also a form of energy. Whenever something moves in a non-ideal environment, it will undergo friction, and that friction will cause some energy to dissipate as heat.

To summarize, in an ideal situation, you can generally say that work done equals change in energy. In a non-ideal situation, this is also true, but some of the energy will be dissipated as heat.

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  • $\begingroup$ Hi, those are both good enough answers for me. I probably should not have included a light bulb as a load, although yes in an ideal situation, if there is such a thing, the energy is wasted away as heat waste. As with the motor we can at least see what's going in, but it also has losses such as frictions of all sorts, lenz's law and too many really to mention right here and right now. $\endgroup$ Commented Jul 26, 2017 at 19:30
  • $\begingroup$ Heat is a transfer of energy due to temperature differences. The temperature increase of an object due to friction is a mechanical process, not heat in the proper physics definition. And objects do not contain heat. When you rub your hands together rapidly, the increase in temperature is due to part of kinetic energy of the hands and arms being transferred (by work) into the molecular structure, increasing the KE of those molecules. The internal energy increases. The hands will then emit heat (energy transferred) because they are warmer than the surroundings. $\endgroup$
    – Bill N
    Commented Jul 26, 2017 at 21:03

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