|
Many students confuse potential energy with kinetic energy. Such students gain the incorrect notion that if an object has kinetic energy, then it does not have potential energy (or vice versa). But don't be fooled! Such an idea is not correct. Objects can have both kinetic energy and potential energy at the same time. An object can be moving (have kinetic energy) and be elevated above the ground at the same time (and also have potential energy). A baseball, a plane, a flying bird are all simple examples of this. In order to have potential energy, the object simply has to have a nonzero height.
|