Energy - What Exactly Is It?A Chapter by DavyOpening the discussionChapter
1 - Energy: What Exactly Is It?
No
matter how much you push the envelope " it will always be stationery
About
15 billion years ago a tremendous explosion started the expansion of the
universe. This explosion was known as the Big Bang. At the moment of this event all of the matter
and energy was contained at one point.
What existed prior to this event is completely unknown and is a matter
of pure speculation. (LaRocco)
The
above paragraph is an excerpt from an article, entitled, ‘The Big Bang " It sure was BIG’! Note the comment: all of matter and energy was contained at one point " not -
all of matter and energy was created
at one point.
There’s
no great mystery in this statement of course, it is a simple matter of physics,
energy, as we ‘know’, cannot be ‘created or destroyed’, it can only be
transformed! The arguable word in the
sentence is the inclusion of ‘matter’ being contained at this point. However, given that energy and matter are,
according to Einstein (E=mc2), one and the same, the semantics of the sentence
are perhaps neither here nor there. What
is possibly more important in this reflection is the fact that many people
actually refer to the Big Bang as the
point at which the universe was ‘created’! That basic misinterpretation muddies the
cosmic waters before any logical thought as to the conceivable possibilities
surrounding the greatest of all mysteries, can be considered. Just to underline the immense implications
contained in this short paragraph, one should also consider; all energy and
matter must mean and include, dark energy and dark matter, or quite simply the
basic constituents for everything thereafter!
My
thoughts as I read through the above article drifted to the most basic
question: ‘What exactly is
energy’? On the face of it, a simple and certainly most obvious
question, which would soon be resolved by a little research? (I have been known to make naive suppositions
from time to time).
Within
a short while I found myself frustrated at every new Internet page. Information categorising energy in its
various forms, thermal (heat); chemical; electrical; radiant; nuclear; elastic;
sound; mechanical and luminous (light), abounded. All of the indicated forms of energy can of
course be divided into the two generic groups of kinetic and potential
energy.
The
Internet also provides an overabundance of data relating to the above
classifications, detailing where, when, how, and why they occur. There is also much made of the fact that
energy is a physical measure that
expresses the amount of work that can be achieved by a force; it then
follows that all forms of energy are measurable through the use of mathematical
symbols. A lot of interesting facts and
figures, but no concrete explanation of exactly what energy is! Eventually,
I stumbled upon a Science Forum discussion page that seemed to offer something I could finally nail
down! The opening question appeared to
offer precisely the information I needed: ‘What
exactly is energy…without using symbols and metaphors’? There was no doubt about it, as I waded into
the opening comment, the first participant began by stating the obvious that molecules
move, and they are ‘hot’ and have lots of kinetic energy. But, then asked: what exactly is energy?
The
discussion progressed along similar fumbling lines as my own research going
through all of the categorisation mentioned above, including the mathematical
concepts involved. Several comments into
the forum I came across the first glimmer of hope in the following comment: …’energy is the capacity to do work of
some sort. It is categorically not a
substance in itself that pervades the universe’. Naturally a swift rejoinder to this comment
followed, which suggested that if the previous writer thought energy was just an abstract concept they
should try sticking a fork into an electrical socket. Whilst amusing, this comment still didn’t
assist me in my quest to define ‘energy’ per se. We all know that ‘electricity’ is a form of energy. And, as with just about every form of energy
I can think of, in certain circumstances, too much of it can do extreme damage
to the fragile human atomic structural arrangement! At its worse, we call that damage death, that
being, in terms of physics, just another ‘changed state’ in an apparently
endless process!
The
next comment suggested that ‘everything’
was energy because all matter, irrespective of state is a form of energy. A fair enough comment, but it still didn’t
answer the basic question! It is amazing
how trains of thought can become bogged down when dealing with oddly esoteric questions. Further again into the discussion the term: ‘creation of the universe’ inevitably
raised its head. The very use of the
word, creation, of course, suggests a
creator and therefore moves the discussion from a purely scientific one to a
philosophical and or spiritual one. This
manipulation of any discussion seems to be the ultimate human response when
frustration and a lack of logical answers set in; a third party is introduced that conveniently provides all the
answers. Even the illustrious Einstein
is recorded as resorting to the same conclusion at one very frustrating moment
in his quest for answers.
Despite
this natural diversion, the discussion continued in a reasonably focused
direction. Some participants were
beginning to show obvious signs of frustration, evident in their comments
becoming more personal and derogatory towards other forum participants. Much was made of the fact that energy
determines the path of change, energy is evident through observable change, and
the amount of energy determines the rate of change.
All
pertinent points, but still none that addressed the original question: What
exactly is energy?
Towards
the end of the discussion there were a few comments relating to molecules and
particles, and the movement of these ‘producing energy’.
Finally,
a respondent came up with the following explanation: Energy,
he said, has no reality apart from its
mathematical dependence on measurable variables. The respondent noted that an object’s kinetic
or potential energies are not measured, but the associated state variables are,
velocity and position respectively. (Sic)
This
answer was expanded upon, by one I assumed to be the convener, who warned that
whilst it wasn’t an easy question to answer, that didn’t make the question
impossible to answer. He
indicated most physicists know exactly what energy is, and continued thus: the concept of energy is ultimately a tool,
invented by humans, to understand the world around us. He stated that whilst this was not a
definition of energy, the whole point was, energy can be MANY things and it is
this vagueness that makes the concept useful.
As
an example, he cites the notion of length, which is close to our primitive
perception; length, we understand as being that there is, “here” and
“there”. The concept of energy, however,
he describes as being a higher order type of tool. It doesn’t correspond so simply to our direct
experience in that no one can point to a primitive notion and state that it is
an example of energy. Therefore, energy is simply an abstraction.
However, it does enable a unified description of diverse phenomena. Energy, as such, is simply a tool and an
additional way to organise our understanding of the universe.
The
writer wraps up by providing what he describes as an exact definition of
energy: “Energy is the generator of
time translations”. Having given
this murky definition, he explains that: this
is why no one gives the exact definition of energy, because it takes years of
intensive training just to comprehend what such a statement really means!
In
this instance, I can only agree. Having
put myself through this meticulous research process, I now wonder what ‘diverse phenomena’ are? I’m sure no one will ever bother to explain
it to me, simply because I wouldn’t understand, even if they bothered!
So,
at the moment of the Big Bang, all diverse
phenomena were present, or were they?
Any
readers’ comments on this small reflection would be most welcome; particularly
if a convincingly simple answer is forthcoming.
Refs: Encyclopedia, W. T. F.
(1999). Energy. Retrieved February 18, 2011, from Wikipedia:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Energy#Forms_of_energy. LaRocco, C. E. A. The
big bang it sure was big. Retrieved February 18, 2011, from University of
Michigan: http://www.umich.edu/~gs265/bigbang.htm. Sciforums, P. (2006). What
exactly is energy. Retrieved February 18, 2011, from SciForums.com:
http://www.sciforums.com/showthread.php?t=54423. © 2015 DavyFeatured Review
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2 Reviews Added on November 23, 2015 Last Updated on November 23, 2015 AuthorDavyAmbarvale/ Sydney, NSW, AustraliaAboutRetired. Trade many years ago - plumbing. Earned a living many ways including six years at sea. Finished working life in education. Now retired. Enjoy - writing - photography - astronomy - physic.. more..Writing
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