Physics Fundamentals Conservation of Energy Kinetic and Potential Energy

Kinetic and Potential Energy: Definition, Formulas & Real-Life Examples

Master the two main forms of mechanical energy — Kinetic Energy (energy of motion) and Potential Energy (stored energy). Learn formulas, differences, and how they convert into each other.

What Are Kinetic and Potential Energy?

Energy exists in many forms, but in classical mechanics we mainly deal with **mechanical energy**, which is the sum of **Kinetic Energy** and **Potential Energy**.

Understanding these two types is essential for solving problems related to motion, conservation of energy, projectile motion, and more.

🏃 Kinetic Energy (KE)

Kinetic Energy is the energy an object possesses due to its motion.

KE = ½ m v²

Where: m = mass (kg), v = velocity (m/s)

  • Depends on both mass and velocity (speed squared — so doubling speed gives 4 times the KE)
  • Unit: Joules (J)
  • Examples: Moving car, bullet, falling object, running person

📦 Potential Energy (PE)

Potential Energy is stored energy due to an object’s position or configuration.

Gravitational PE = m g h

Where: m = mass, g = 9.8 m/s², h = height

  • Depends on mass, gravity, and height above a reference point
  • Unit: Joules (J)
  • Examples: Water at the top of a dam, stretched spring, book on a shelf, roller coaster at the top

Kinetic vs Potential Energy

Feature Kinetic Energy Potential Energy
DefinitionEnergy of motionStored energy due to position
Formula½mv²mgh
Depends onMass and velocityMass, gravity, height
When maximum?At highest speedAt highest position

Real-Life Examples

1. Swinging Pendulum

At the highest point → Maximum Potential Energy. At the bottom → Maximum Kinetic Energy.

2. Roller Coaster

At the top of the hill → High PE, low KE. At the bottom → Low PE, high KE.

3. Dropping a Ball

As the ball falls, PE decreases while KE increases by the same amount.

4. Stretched Bow

Elastic potential energy in the bow converts to kinetic energy of the arrow.

Solved Practice Problems

Problem 1: A 5 kg object is moving at 10 m/s. Calculate its kinetic energy.

KE = ½ × 5 × 10² = 250 J

Problem 2: A 2 kg book is lifted to a height of 3 m. What is its gravitational potential energy? (g=10 m/s²)

PE = mgh = 2 × 10 × 3 = 60 J