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A pendulum has 532 J of potential energy at the highest point of its swing. How much kinetic energy will it have at the bottom of its swing?

User Geltrude
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1 Answer

6 votes

Answer:

532 J

Step-by-step explanation:

If there are no frictional forces/air resistance involved in the problem, then the mechanical energy of the system is conserved.

This means that:


E_i = E_f

where E_i is the initial mechanical energy and E_f is the final mechanical energy. The mechanical energy is the sum of potential energy U and kinetic energy K:


U_i + K_i = U_f + K_f

At the highest point, the speed of the swing is zero, so


K_i = 0

while at the bottom point, the potential energy is zero (if we take the bottom point of the swing as reference level), so


U_f =0

This means that the previous equation becomes


U_i = K_f

and since


U_i = 532 J

the kinetic energy at the bottom of its swing is


K_f = 532 J

User EdibleEnergy
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