Guy Fawkes
The voice of treason
- Sep 29, 2007
- 8,297
As I said above, it doesn't create the potential energy. If there's a weight on the floor, how does that weight get potential energy?
If that floor underneath it were to suddenly vanish, and nothing else were to exert any force onto that object, what would happen to it?
Would it stay put? or would it drop until it hit something to stop it falling further? - If it drops, then it surely has potential energy
(the energy for this is already stored there in getting it to that height from the centre of the planet where the gravitational pull is greatest and everything on the planet is trying to fall to)
Another example is if you throw a ball into the air what happens? does it keep rising or does gravity pull it back to the ground? Your energy input was to raise it to a greater height so how does it fall again if the force of gravity isn't overcoming this and making it drop again (or is that all down to air resistance, both up and down that makes it drop?)