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Forms of energy : ウィキペディア英語版
Forms of energy

In the context of physical science, several forms of energy have been identified. These include:

Some entries in the above list constitute or comprise others in the list. The list is not necessarily complete. Whenever physical scientists discover that a certain phenomenon appears to violate the law of energy conservation, new forms are typically added that account for the discrepancy.
Heat and work are special cases in that they are not properties of systems, but are instead properties of ''processes'' that transfer energy. In general we cannot measure how much heat or work are present in an object, but rather only how much energy is transferred among objects in certain ways during the occurrence of a given process. Heat and work are measured as positive or negative depending on which side of the transfer we view them from.
Classical mechanics distinguishes between kinetic energy, which is determined by an object's movement through space, and potential energy, which is a function of the position of an object within a field, which may itself be related to the arrangement of other objects or particles. These include gravitational energy (which is stored in the way masses are arranged in a gravitational field), several types of nuclear energy (which utilize potentials from the nuclear force and the weak force), electric energy (from the electric field), and magnetic energy (from the magnetic field).
Other familiar types of energy are a varying mix of both potential and kinetic energy. An example is mechanical energy which is the sum of (usually macroscopic) kinetic and potential energy in a system. Elastic energy in materials is also dependent upon electrical potential energy (among atoms and molecules), as is chemical energy, which is stored and released from a reservoir of electrical potential energy between electrons, and the molecules or atomic nuclei that attract them. .
Potential energies are often measured as positive or negative depending on whether they are greater or less than the energy of a specified base state or configuration such as two interacting bodies being infinitely far apart.
Wave energies (such as light or sound energy), kinetic energy, and rest energy are each greater than or equal to zero because they are measured in comparison to a base state of zero energy: "no wave", "no motion", and "no inertia", respectively.
It has been attempted to categorize ''all'' forms of energy as either kinetic or potential, but as Richard Feynman points out:
Also, at relativistic speeds, defining kinetic energy is problematic because the energy due to the body's motion does not simply contribute additively to the total energy as it does at classical speeds.
Energy may be transformed between different forms at various efficiencies. Items that transform between these forms are called transducers.
==Mechanical energy==

(詳細はLagrangian and Hamiltonian mechanics
In more advanced topics, kinetic plus potential energy is physically the total energy of the system, but also known as the ''Hamiltonian'' of the system:
: H = T + V , \,\!
used in Hamilton's equations of motion, to obtain equations describing a classical system in terms of energy rather than forces. The Hamiltonian is just a mathematical expression, rather than a ''form'' of energy.
Another analogous quantity of diverse applicability and efficiency is the Lagrangian of the system:
: L = T - V \,\!,
used in Lagrange's equations of motion, which serve the same purpose as Hamilton's equations.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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