Automobile or Related Car Terms
(scientific terms about the use of vehicles including cars, trucks, or any automobiles including their technology as related to transportation)
At high speeds, virtually all a car's energy is used to overcome drag.
A typical gasoline engine is 30 percent efficient, so it uses 30 percent of the energy in the gasoline to move the car forward and wastes the other 70 percent, mostly as heat.
A car's rubber tires are elastic, so they spring back to shape after running over bumps in the road.
An electric motor converts electrical energy into mechanical energy.
These changes can be physical or chemical, and allow energy to be converted to another form; for example, the chemical energy of fuel is converted into heat and then into mechanical energy in an engine.
Friction between the tires of a car and the road beneath tends to slow it down, as does the friction between air moving around a car and the metal bodywork.
Fuels; such as, gasoline are made mostly of hydrocarbons (carbon and hydogen molecules).
A fuel cell is similar to a large battery, but where a battery gradually runs down, a fuel cell runs continuously for as long as there is fuel in the tank.
Hydrogen is pumped into the cell from an on board tank, while the oxygen is taken from the air outside. Together they form steam, which is emitted through the car's exhaust.
Some car makers are putting a lot of time and effort into developing hybrid cars where the electric motors are powered by fuel cells.
Hydrogen is the most abundant element in the universe, but it is highly flammable; that is, it bursts into flames easily and as the lightest gas, it just floats away. Even so, it can be extracted from water, fossil fuels, and other substances.
The problem is to compress, or squeeze, hydrogen into a tank small enough to fit in a car. The tank can be topped off with hydrogen at refueling stations, but there are very few of such places available at this time.
The advantages and disadvantages of fuel-cell cars
- Fuel cells are reliable and make little noise since they have no moving parts.
- Water is the only thing emitted through the exhaust.
- Increasing the amount of electricity produced so the car has more power.
- Compressing and safely storing enough hydrogen into a small tank for hundreds of miles of driving.
- Making affordable cars which are now very expensive in that a fuel-cell system costs ten times more to make than a conventional engine.
In theory, electric-fuel-cell cars could be the answer for clean cars of the future:
There are a number of challenges still to be overcome:
The gearbox in a car contains gear wheels of different sizes that mesh together to make the car go faster, increase its climbing power up hills, or drive in reverse.
2. The pulling force (force of attraction) between any two masses in the universe.
On earth, gravity is experienced as a downward force that makes things fall toward the ground.
2. The transfer of energy from one substance to another one.
The energy flow will always be from the warmer substance (with a higher temperature) to the cooler substance (at lower temperature).
Amounts of heat are expressed in energy units; such as, the calorie, the joule, and the BTU or British Thermal Unit which is about 252 calories and about 4.2 calories is a joule (the basic unit of energy in the meter-kilogram-second system).
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