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By the end of this section, you will be able to:
  • Relate the work done during a time interval to the power delivered
  • Find the power expended by a force acting on a moving body

The concept of work involves force and displacement; the work-energy theorem relates the net work done on a body to the difference in its kinetic energy, calculated between two points on its trajectory. None of these quantities or relations involves time explicitly, yet we know that the time available to accomplish a particular amount of work is frequently just as important to us as the amount itself. In the chapter-opening figure, several sprinters may have achieved the same velocity at the finish, and therefore did the same amount of work, but the winner of the race did it in the least amount of time.

We express the relation between work done and the time interval involved in doing it, by introducing the concept of power. Since work can vary as a function of time, we first define average power    as the work done during a time interval, divided by the interval,

P ave = Δ W Δ t .

Then, we can define the instantaneous power (frequently referred to as just plain power    ).

Power

Power is defined as the rate of doing work, or the limit of the average power for time intervals approaching zero,

P = d W d t .

If the power is constant over a time interval, the average power for that interval equals the instantaneous power, and the work done by the agent supplying the power is W = P Δ t . If the power during an interval varies with time, then the work done is the time integral of the power,

W = P d t .

The work-energy theorem relates how work can be transformed into kinetic energy. Since there are other forms of energy as well, as we discuss in the next chapter, we can also define power as the rate of transfer of energy. Work and energy are measured in units of joules, so power is measured in units of joules per second, which has been given the SI name watts, abbreviation W: 1 J/s = 1 W . Another common unit for expressing the power capability of everyday devices is horsepower: 1 hp = 746 W .

Pull-up power

An 80-kg army trainee does 10 pull-ups in 10 s ( [link] ). How much average power do the trainee’s muscles supply moving his body? ( Hint: Make reasonable estimates for any quantities needed.)

The figure is an illustration of a person doing a pull up. The person moves a vertical distance of Delta y during the pull up. A downward force of m times vector g is shown acting on the person both at the top and bottom positions of the pull up.
What is the power expended in doing ten pull-ups in ten seconds?

Strategy

The work done against gravity, going up or down a distance Δ y , is m g Δ y . (If you lift and lower yourself at constant speed, the force you exert cancels gravity over the whole pull-up cycle.) Thus, the work done by the trainee’s muscles (moving, but not accelerating, his body) for a complete repetition (up and down) is 2 m g Δ y . Let’s assume that Δ y = 2 ft 60 cm . Also, assume that the arms comprise 10% of the body mass and are not included in the moving mass. With these assumptions, we can calculate the work done for 10 pull-ups and divide by 10 s to get the average power.

Solution

The result we get, applying our assumptions, is

P ave = 10 × 2 ( 0.9 × 80 kg ) ( 9.8 m/s 2 ) ( 0.6 m ) 10 s = 850 W .

Significance

This is typical for power expenditure in strenuous exercise; in everyday units, it’s somewhat more than one horsepower ( 1 hp = 746 W ) .

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Source:  OpenStax, University physics volume 1. OpenStax CNX. Sep 19, 2016 Download for free at http://cnx.org/content/col12031/1.5
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