Force, Work and Energy

1. Force — A Push or a Pull

A FORCE is a PUSH or a PULL that changes or tries to change the motion of an object.

'You apply force every time you kick a ball, open a door, lift a bag, or squeeze a sponge. Without force, nothing in the universe would MOVE.'

Effects of Force

EffectExample
Starts motionPushing a stationary bicycle
Stops motionCatching a ball
Changes speedPedalling a bicycle to go faster
Changes directionHitting a ball with a bat — a tennis ball changes direction
Changes shapeSqueezing a clay ball. Stretching a rubber band.

Types of Forces

ForceDescriptionExamples
Muscular forceForce from our MUSCLESLifting a bag, pushing a cart, pulling a rope
Gravitational forceEarth pulls everything TOWARDS its centreFalling of an apple, a ball rolling DOWN a slope
Frictional forceForce that OPPOSES motion between two surfacesWriting with a pen, walking, brakes on a bicycle
Magnetic forceForce exerted by a MAGNETAttracting iron pins, repelling another magnet
Electrostatic forceForce between CHARGED objectsBalloon sticking to a wall after rubbing, hair standing up with a comb
Mechanical forceForce from MACHINESA crane lifting heavy loads, a car engine moving the wheels

'GRAVITY pulls everything DOWN at the same rate — a feather and a hammer would fall at the same speed in a vacuum (no air). On Earth, air resistance makes the feather fall slower.'

2. Friction — The Opposing Force

FRICTION is a force that OPPOSES motion when two surfaces RUB against each other.

Types of Friction

TypeDescriptionExample
Static frictionOpposes STARTING motionPushing a heavy box that does not move at first
Sliding frictionOpposes SLIDING motionA book sliding across a table eventually stops
Rolling frictionOpposes ROLLING motionA ball rolling slows down

'Rolling friction is ALWAYS less than sliding friction. That is why wheels were invented — it is EASIER to roll a load than to slide it.'

Useful Friction — We NEED It

ActivityHow Friction Helps
WalkingFriction between shoes and ground prevents slipping
WritingFriction between pen and paper makes the mark
BrakesFriction between brake pads and wheels stops the vehicle
Lighting a matchFriction creates heat that ignites the match
Holding objectsFriction keeps items from slipping out of our hands

Harmful Friction — We Want to Reduce It

ProblemSolution
Car engines overheatAdd OIL (lubricant) to reduce friction
Moving parts wear outUse BALL BEARINGS to replace sliding with rolling
Machines make noiseUse SMOOTH surfaces and lubricants
Difficulty moving heavy objectsUse WHEELS or rollers

'Sometimes friction is our FRIEND (walking, brakes) and sometimes it is our ENEMY (wear and tear). The key is knowing when to INCREASE it and when to DECREASE it.'

3. Simple Machines

SIMPLE MACHINES make work EASIER by multiplying force, changing the direction of force, or increasing speed.

'Simple machines have been used for THOUSANDS of years. The ancient Egyptians used ramps (inclined planes) and levers to build the PYRAMIDS.'

Types of Simple Machines

Simple MachineHow It WorksExamples
LeverA rigid bar that rotates on a FULCRUM (pivot point)See-saw, crowbar, scissors, nutcracker, tweezers
PulleyA wheel with a rope or chain. Changes DIRECTION of force.Flagpole, window blinds, crane, well bucket
Inclined planeA SLOPING surface. Reduces the force needed to lift.Ramp, staircase, slide, mountain road
Wheel and axleA larger wheel attached to a smaller axleBicycle wheel, steering wheel, door knob, screwdriver
ScrewAn inclined plane WRAPPED around a cylinderJar lid, screw, bolt, drill
WedgeA triangular tool. Splits things apart.Knife, axe, needle, nail, zipper

How a Lever Works

First-class lever: Fulcrum IN THE MIDDLE (see-saw, crowbar). Second-class lever: Load IN THE MIDDLE (nutcracker, wheelbarrow). Third-class lever: Effort IN THE MIDDLE (tweezers, fishing rod).

4. Energy — The Ability to Do Work

ENERGY is the ability to do WORK. It exists in MANY forms.

'Energy CANNOT be created or destroyed — it can only CHANGE from one form to another. This is the LAW OF CONSERVATION OF ENERGY.'

Forms of Energy

Form of EnergyDescriptionExamples
Heat energyEnergy of moving particlesFire, sun, heaters, hot food
Light energyEnergy that travels in wavesSunlight, torch, bulb, candle
Sound energyEnergy of VIBRATIONSMusic, speech, ringing bell
Electrical energyEnergy from MOVING ELECTRONSBatteries, power lines, lightning
Kinetic energyEnergy of MOTIONRunning child, flowing water, moving car
Potential energySTORED energy (due to position)A drawn bow, water behind a dam, a raised hammer
Chemical energyEnergy stored in CHEMICAL BONDSFood, batteries, petrol, wood
Nuclear energyEnergy from the NUCLEUS of an atomSun, nuclear power plants

Energy Conversion Examples

DeviceEnergy Conversion
Electric fanElectrical → Kinetic (moving blades)
Light bulbElectrical → Light + Heat
Musical instrumentKinetic (plucking string) → Sound
Car engineChemical (petrol) → Heat → Kinetic
Solar panelLight → Electrical
MicrophoneSound → Electrical

5. Renewable and Non-Renewable Energy

Non-Renewable Energy Sources

These are LIMITED and will eventually RUN OUT.

SourceHow It WorksProblems
CoalBurned to produce heat → electricityPOLLUTION. Releases CO₂. Limited.
Petroleum (Oil)Refined into petrol/diesel for vehiclesPOLLUTION. Oil spills. Will run out.
Natural gasBurned for heating and electricityPOLLUTION. Limited.
Uranium (Nuclear)Nuclear fission to produce electricityRadioactive WASTE. Dangerous accidents.

Renewable Energy Sources

These are NATURALLY REPLENISHED and will NEVER run out.

SourceHow It WorksAdvantages
Solar energySunlight captured by solar panelsENDLESS. Clean. No pollution.
Wind energyWind turns WIND TURBINES → electricityENDLESS. Clean. Good in windy areas.
Hydro (water) energyFlowing water turns TURBINES → electricityRELIABLE. Clean. Dams can store water.
Geothermal energyHEAT from inside the EarthSTEADY. Clean. Uses Earth's own heat.
Tidal energyOcean TIDES turn turbinesPREDICTABLE. Clean.
BiomassBurning plant/animal wasteRENEWABLE. Reduces waste.

'Fossil fuels (coal, oil, gas) took MILLIONS of years to form. We are using them up in a FEW HUNDRED years. RENEWABLE energy is the future — clean, endless, and SAFE for the planet.'

Key Facts to Remember

  • Force is a PUSH or a PULL.
  • Friction opposes motion — it can be USEFUL or HARMFUL.
  • Simple machines make work EASIER.
  • 'Energy CANNOT be created or destroyed — it only changes form.'
  • Renewable energy sources will NEVER run out; non-renewable sources WILL.

Common Mistakes

MistakeWhy It Is WrongCorrect Understanding
Thinking energy can be createdEnergy only CHANGES formThe TOTAL energy in the universe is CONSTANT
Confusing weight and mass due to gravityMass is amount of matter; weight is the FORCE of gravity on that massYour mass is the same everywhere; your weight changes with gravity
Believing friction is always badWithout friction we could not walk, write, or hold thingsFriction is ESSENTIAL for many everyday activities
Calling a screw a simple machineA screw IS a simple machineIt is an inclined plane wound around a cylinder

Exam Focus (ICSE Class 5)

TopicMarks (Typical)Question Type
Types of force3-4 marksIdentify the force / give examples
Friction — useful and harmful3-4 marksExplain with examples
Simple machines and their uses4-5 marksMatch machine to use / explain how it works
Forms of energy3-4 marksIdentify energy forms and conversions
Renewable vs non-renewable3-4 marksDifferentiate with examples

Self-Test: 5 Questions

Q1. What is force? Give two effects of force with examples.

Q2. Explain two situations where friction is useful and two where it is harmful.

Q3. Name the simple machine used in each: (a) A see-saw (b) A ramp (c) A flagpole (d) A knife.

Q4. What is the Law of Conservation of Energy? Give an example.

Q5. List three renewable and three non-renewable energy sources.

Answers

A1. Force is a PUSH or PULL. Effects: (1) Starts motion — kicking a stationary ball. (2) Stops motion — catching a ball. (3) Changes shape — squeezing clay.

A2. Useful: (1) Walking — friction between shoes and ground. (2) Brakes — friction stops vehicles. Harmful: (1) Engine parts wear out. (2) Machines overheat due to friction.

A3. (a) Lever. (b) Inclined plane. (c) Pulley. (d) Wedge.

A4. Energy can neither be created nor destroyed — it only changes from one form to another. Example: An electric fan converts electrical energy to kinetic energy (moving blades) and some heat.

A5. Renewable: Solar, wind, hydro, geothermal, tidal. Non-renewable: Coal, petroleum, natural gas, uranium.

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