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)
In metric units, one horsepower = 746 watts or roughly the power produced by twelve 60-watt light bulbs.
- An ordinary gasoline engine, powered by a fuel tank.
- An electric motor, powered by batteries.
The driver can switch between gasoline and electric power to suit different driving conditions.
Hydraulic pipes power the brakes on most cars. They also power the lifting rams on bulldozers and cranes.
Moving objects usually grind to a halt because there is a force, or friction, trying to stop them, but if the force of friction is taken away as in space, then Newton's first law explains the function that keeps the stars, planets, and moons continually moving.
External combustion engines; such as, steam engines, produce power less efficiently by burning fuel in an external chamber to heat a liquid or gas, which then moves a piston or a turbine.
Each piston in an internal combustion engine makes four "strokes"
- The piston moves down, sucking in air through the inlet valve while a tiny squirt of gasoline is injected into the air.
- The inlet valve at the top closes, trapping everything inside and then the piston moves up, squeezing the air and gasoline tightly together.
- When the piston reaches the top, a carefully timed spark sets fire to the gasoline; as the gas burns explosively, forcing the piston back down.
- Finally, the piston moves back up and pushes the burned gases out of the outlet valve which leave the car through the exhaust.
The four-stroke cycles include explosions inside the engine's cylinders, on top of the pistons, and the blast force pushes the pistons down; then, the crankshaft swings around and pushes the pistons back up for the next stage in the cycle. The cycles for one piston are described in the following sequences:
A jet engine moves a plane or car forward by firing a stream of hot gas backward; a scientific idea known as action and reaction or Newton's third law.
To make a moving car stop, all its kinetic energy must be converted into other forms by heating up the brakes, for example.
A wrench, a jack, and a crowbar, used for changing tires are all "simple machines".
2. Any device that transmits, modifies, or magnifies forces for a specific purpose.Machines typically either alter the amount of force applied, or the direction along which it is applied. A simple machine is a machine with only one or two parts.
The momentum of an object is its mass times its velocity, so trucks generally have more momentum than cars, and fast-moving cars have more momentum than slower ones.
The pistons power the crankshaft and energy from the pistons drives the gearbox and ultimately the wheels. It is also used in shock absorbers to convert the energy of bouncing suspension springs into heat.
Exhaust pollution is a mixture of gases; such as, carbon monoxide and solids including soot.
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