energy
(noun)
the capacity to do work
Examples of energy in the following topics:
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Types of Energy
- The various types of energy include kinetic, potential, and chemical energy.
- The potential energy stored in molecules can be converted to chemical energy, which can ultimately be converted to kinetic energy, enabling an organism to move.
- Energy associated with objects in motion is called kinetic energy.
- The jet engines are converting potential energy in fuel to the kinetic energy of movement.
- This type of potential energy is called chemical energy, and like all potential energy, it can be used to do work.
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The Role of Energy and Metabolism
- All organisms require energy to complete tasks; metabolism is the set of the chemical reactions that release energy for cellular processes.
- Plants convert light energy from the sun into chemical energy stored in molecules during the process of photosynthesis.
- Some of these chemical reactions are spontaneous and release energy, whereas others require energy to proceed.
- Energy is needed to perform heavy labor and exercise, but humans also use a great deal of energy while thinking and even while sleeping.
- Just as energy is required to both build and demolish a building, energy is required for both the synthesis and breakdown of molecules.
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Free Energy
- Free energy, called Gibbs free energy (G), is usable energy or energy that is available to do work.
- Since chemical reactions release energy when energy-storing bonds are broken, how is the energy associated with chemical reactions quantified and expressed?
- A measurement of free energy is used to quantitate these energy transfers.
- In other words, Gibbs free energy is usable energy or energy that is available to do work.
- Exergonic reactions release energy; endergonic reactions require energy to proceed.
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Activation Energy
- Activation energy is the energy required for a reaction to occur, and determines its rate.
- Why would an energy-releasing, negative ∆G reaction actually require some energy to proceed?
- Since these are energy-storing bonds, they release energy when broken.
- Free energy diagrams illustrate the energy profiles for a given reaction.
- This figure implies that the activation energy is in the form of heat energy.
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Food Energy and ATP
- Animals use energy for metabolism, obtaining that energy from the breakdown of food through the process of cellular respiration.
- Animals need food to obtain energy and maintain homeostasis.
- Adenosine triphosphate, or ATP, is the primary energy currency in cells.
- ATP stores energy in phosphate ester bonds, releasing energy when the phosphodiester bonds are broken: ATP is converted to ADP and a phosphate group.
- ATP is the energy molecule of the cell.
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Introduction to Light Energy
- All electromagnetic radiation, or light energy, travels at a particular wavelength and carries a certain amount of energy.
- The manner in which solar energy travels is described as waves.
- The longer the wavelength, the less energy is carried.
- Short, tight waves carry the most energy.
- The sun emits energy in the form of electromagnetic radiation.
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Transforming Chemical Energy
- An electrical energy plant converts energy from one form to another form that can be more easily used .
- For example, geothermal energy plants start with underground thermal energy (heat) and transform it into electrical energy that will be transported to homes and factories.
- ATP is the principle form of stored energy used for cellular functions and is frequently referred to as the energy currency of the cell.
- The energy released during cellular respiration is then used in other biological processes.
- This geothermal energy plant transforms thermal energy from deep in the ground into electrical energy, which can be easily used.
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The Purpose and Process of Photosynthesis
- The process of photosynthesis converts light energy to chemical energy, which can be used by organisms for different metabolic processes.
- The processes of all organisms—from bacteria to humans—require energy.
- To get this energy, many organisms access stored energy by eating food.
- But where does the stored energy in food originate?
- All of this energy can be traced back to the process of photosynthesis and light energy from the sun.
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Strategies for Acquiring Energy
- All living things require energy in one form or another since energy is required by most, complex, metabolic pathways (often in the form of ATP); life itself is an energy-driven process.
- It is important to understand how organisms acquire energy and how that energy is passed from one organism to another through food webs and their constituent food chains.
- Photosynthetic autotrophs (photoautotrophs) use sunlight as an energy source, whereas chemosynthetic autotrophs (chemoautotrophs) use inorganic molecules as an energy source.
- Photoautotrophs harness the solar energy of the sun by converting it to chemical energy in the form of ATP (and NADP).
- This allows chemoautotrophs to synthesize complex organic molecules, such as glucose, for their own energy and in turn supplies energy to the rest of the ecosystem.
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The First Law of Thermodynamics
- Thermodynamics is the study of heat energy and other types of energy, such as work, and the various ways energy is transferred within chemical systems.
- Energy exists in many different forms.
- For instance, light bulbs transform electrical energy into light energy, and gas stoves transform chemical energy from natural gas into heat energy.
- Plants perform one of the most biologically useful transformations of energy on Earth: they convert the energy of sunlight into the chemical energy stored within organic molecules.
- Plants can convert electromagnetic radiation (light energy) from the sun into chemical energy.