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Gravity as source of energy?

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11 years ago
If you throw a ball vertically in a vacuum-chamber with velocity=1x 1m high, how high would you throw it with like v=5x?

5^5=25 - you need 5x the velocity/energy and get it 5 times back in 25 single steps.
(Doesn't include convertion loss)

Force = Gravity * Time.
The less time you need to move something, the less the gravity affects it.

Do you think we could use gravity for infinite motion?
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11 years ago
Answer is v^2/2*g

Please pay attention next in your elementary school physics.. your thoughts make absolutely no sense.

Mass in gravity field has potential energy m*g*h (h being height, assuming constant g which you can for earthling purposes).

This potential energy can be converted to kinetic which is 0.5*m*v^2 and vice versa.

Just do m*g*h = 0.5*m*v^2 and you can get answers to such silly questions.
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11 years ago
only spring..
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Ouch...

Licho said everything relevant about the physics part of the question, but
quote:
Do you think we could use gravity for infinite motion?

We already do. They're called sattelites.

You cannot use gravity to generate energy, if that's your question. Gravity, or more precisely gravitational force is the result of the gravitational field around massive (as in having mass) objects. Moving in this field may require or perform work, which converts potential energy into other forms of energy (momentum, heat etc.).
You cannot build a machine that uses a gravitational field to generate more energy than you provide the machine. A machine, by definition, performs a process (which may or may not require energy) to perform a certain task, in this case generating (more) energy. After this process, it returns to its initial state. However, the work performed by (or required for) moving through a gravitational field only depends on the start and end point. If both points are the same, no overall work is done and hence no energy was gained (converted from gravitational energy) in the process.

Inb4 magnets.
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It can be used...For example space probes like voyager 1 and voyager 2 used the gravity of planets when they passed by and theyr speed was increased.Do we see a potentail in using this kind of gravity?Black holes for example can be a far more strongher slingshot then the gravitation planets have.If you have so much time NeonSturm just think a way to capture energy produced when you slingshot pass by a planet with something(that stores energy to).

Examples:





This is how the space probes Voyager 1 and Voyager 2increased theyr speed and now are flying away from our solar system at the speed of 14-17 km/s.

http://hypertextbook.com/facts/1997/PatricePean.shtml
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11 years ago
Lol fail

Here is another (hopefully harder one):
You have a boiler filled with water which you heat up in order to produce steam. The steam being lighter than air rises. Then after it went up very high you condense the steam extracting the heat out of it and the water will fall down and you can power a watermill for instance.
Basically you would get all the heat back you put into it to turn the water it into steam + the energy you get from the falling water no?

Now why isnt this a perpetuum mobile?
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@forever
one problem... said planet will eventualy fall into the sun because of this

@[de]Rick
in theory if you had 100% efficiency... yea we don't :P now if you could pull ambient heat out of the vacum chamber wour device is in and pump that into the boiler at no energy cost :D
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I think this is the best available energy source we can make in the curent moment.We just need to research the tokamak



It sayis that we can produce energy for a family of 5 humans with just a glas of watter and 3 rocks.Explanation in the video if you want to understand fusion.
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ROrankForever
They use gravity to alter the direction and speed of a satelite in order to spare fuel. However no energy is created during this proces since the energy of the system as a whole will still be the same.

GBrankKyubey
Not even close to why it isnt a perpetuum mobile :)
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11 years ago
I had epic idea because of the Fusion video i left here:



Just make fusion power plants in zero k make more if they are built in watter.WEll the explanation for this is in the video and sounds a bit legit:D
+1 / -1
Fusion is nice and all but it wont be commercial until ~2050. Current fusion reactors are used for experiments rather than energy production. They dont produce much energy yet.

From what i know it has to do with the size of the torus once you go past a certain diameter fusion efficiency rises high enough so that it will actualy produce more energy than it consumes. Guess it has to do with volume and area.
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11 years ago
well if we invest more money into developing tokamak fusion reactor instead of tons of military we will have chances to use it even after 5 years
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11 years ago
if only there was pease on earth, and our leaders weren't stupid nubs
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11 years ago
They first have to make money off oil then they will switch
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11 years ago
Note: I removed the image posts because they cluttered what could be an informative thread for some people, while adding nothing to the discussion.

quote:
They use gravity to alter the direction and speed of a satelite in order to spare fuel. However no energy is created during this proces since the energy of the system as a whole will still be the same.

Absolutely correct; some of the angular momentum of the planet is transferred to the vehicle. The planet has such huge amounts of energy compared to the vehicle that the transfer is imperceptible. But no energy is created.
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11 years ago
quote:
Here is another (hopefully harder one):
You have a boiler filled with water which you heat up in order to produce steam. The steam being lighter than air rises. Then after it went up very high you condense the steam extracting the heat out of it and the water will fall down and you can power a watermill for instance.
Basically you would get all the heat back you put into it to turn the water it into steam + the energy you get from the falling water no?

Now why isnt this a perpetuum mobile?

Not even remotely possible, but kind of annoying to explain, so I'll leave you with another mind-bender that might be closer to home.

Heat is energy. When you make something cold, you are removing heat, and therefore removing energy from the system. So shouldn't refrigerators be giving you energy, if you are removing it? Instead they use energy.

If you can understand the answer to that, things will make more sense.
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Well rick obviously knows the answer.
But yes, his "paradox" is sort of complex to disprove. Let me try:
Let's assume the water is already steam in the first place, you just make it warmer (like in a hot air balloon). Just so we don't have to discuss phase transitions.
We can also assume the steam to stay in a bubble and not mix with the air (you sort of did that already).

When you expand the steam, you are working against the air pressure at that level. Then the steam rises, because the pressure gets lower the higher you go (that's what's generating lift, the pressure below the steam is higher than above, so the steam gets pushed up). If you then contract the steam, you get energy back, but less than you put into it to expand.
The difference between energy used for expansion and energy gotten from contraction comes in the form of potential energy: The water can fall down.

Note that while this is not a perpetuum mobile, we don't necessarily have to be the ones who invest into expanding the steam (or heating the water): The sun does that, conveniently. Rain comes from exactly this "paradox", the sun is the energy input though. People have used it for thousands of years. Thank the sun for watermills!

Lemme give you another one:
Imagine a 747 is sitting on a conveyor belt, as wide and long as a runway. The conveyor belt is designed to exactly match the speed of the wheels, moving in the opposite direction (the plane is stationary relative to the ground around the treadmill). Can the plane take off?
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@MauranKilom
yes, once the conveyor belt reaches a certain speed, (asuming the conveyor belt is wide enough) it will begin to accelerate the air touching it. this will produce lift and the plane will fly like a kite :P

make sure to tie all your conveyor belt 747s with string so they dont fly away

nothing is imposible, just impractical
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But why does the conveyor belt move? :P
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11 years ago
cause the wheels spin, :P
did you know even if you ram the engines to full speed as long as the wheels are in contact with the ground they will spin :P
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