On Wed, Aug 16, 2017 at 10:18:54PM -0400, Christopher Sean Hilton wrote: > On Wed, Aug 16, 2017 at 01:35:20PM -0700, C. Berry wrote: > > An object motionless in a g field has constant potential energy, > > hence no energy input is required to keep it there. > > I'm not 100% certain that this is the case. It is the case. > In your example g is very small being a function of a large > r^(-2). But in fact an energy transfer is happening between objects > on Terra (the oceans) and Luna. That's because the oceans are not motionless in Luna's g-field. Earth's rotation drags them around. The power lost per unit mass is microscopic, but the Earth has a lot of mass and it has been rotating for a very long time. > Here's a relevant thought experiment. Can you hold a 20kg mass, 1m off > of the sea level surface of Terra without other support forever? Human muscles are terribly inefficient, and require power input just to hold things steady. That's not a fundamental physics limitation, it's just a biological trade-off. Other animals don't necessarily have the same limitations, nor does it apply to most non-biological methods. > Or do you get tired from paying the ~ 200J energy cost and have to > put it down at some point in time. No, my muscles get tired because they pay a biological power cost entirely unrelated to the 200 J potential energy difference of the mass. The 200 J energy cost is paid *once*: while lifting the mass from the surface to its new position. Anything after that is just biological wastefulness. > I don't know the names for these two balanced forms of potential > energy. Someone else would have to tell me whether or not ~ 720kW > are spent keeping the mass off of the ground for an hour. No, there is no power expenditure involved (and the units are wrong anyway). - Tim