Physics, asked by sanjaymshr, 4 months ago

What is the significance of arbitrary zero level for we assuring potential energy?​

Answers

Answered by amitaraniparimanik
0

Answer:

The normal definition of a potential energy is somewhat arbitrary. Consider where a potential comes from: It appears when the total energy (potential plus kinetic) is constant. But if something is constant, we can add a number to it, and it is still constant! Thus whether we define the gravitational potential at the surface of the earth to be 0 or 100 J does not matter. Only differences in potential energies play a rôle. It is customary to define the potential “far away”, as x→∞ to be zero. That is a very workable definition, except in one case: if we take a square well and make it deeper and deeper, the energy of the lowest state decreases with the bottom of the well. As the well depth goes to infinity, the energy of the lowest bound state reaches −∞, and so does the second, third etc. state. It makes much more physical sense to define the bottom of the well to have zero energy, and the potential outside to have value V0, which goes to infinity.

Answered by lyngdohmagrina
0

The nature of potential energy is that the zero point is arbitrary; it can be set like the origin of a coordinate system. That is not to say that it is insignificant; once the zero of potential energy is set, then every value of potential energy is measured with respect to that zero.

Explanation:

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