Learn on PengiAmplify Science (California) Grade 8Chapter 1: What Is Energy?

Lesson 4: Reading: Energy Inventions

Key Idea.

Section 1

Analyzing Energy Articles

Key Idea

Scientific texts present specific claims supported by evidence. Analyzing descriptions of devices involves tracking the energy story presented in the text.

This technical analysis identifies the specific components that capture energy. Descriptions of moving parts indicate kinetic energy, while storage mechanisms indicate potential energy. This analysis reveals the logic behind an engineer's design.

Section 2

Capturing and Storing Energy

Key Idea

Engineering systems can capture ambient energy and save it for future use. These systems typically transform kinetic energy (such as the motion of a hand crank) into potential energy.

Real-world inventions, including energy-harvesting backpacks, demonstrate this principle. They utilize the energy from human movement—which typically dissipates—and store it in a battery. This stored potential energy empowers users to operate devices whenever needed.

Book overview

Jump across lessons in the current chapter without opening the full course modal.

Continue this chapter

Chapter 1: What Is Energy?

  1. Lesson 1

    Lesson 1: Pre-Unit Assessment

  2. Lesson 2

    Lesson 2: Energy in Systems

  3. Lesson 3

    Lesson 3: Kinetic and Potential Energy

  4. Lesson 4Current

    Lesson 4: Reading: Energy Inventions

Lesson overview

Expand to review the lesson summary and core properties.

Expand

Section 1

Analyzing Energy Articles

Key Idea

Scientific texts present specific claims supported by evidence. Analyzing descriptions of devices involves tracking the energy story presented in the text.

This technical analysis identifies the specific components that capture energy. Descriptions of moving parts indicate kinetic energy, while storage mechanisms indicate potential energy. This analysis reveals the logic behind an engineer's design.

Section 2

Capturing and Storing Energy

Key Idea

Engineering systems can capture ambient energy and save it for future use. These systems typically transform kinetic energy (such as the motion of a hand crank) into potential energy.

Real-world inventions, including energy-harvesting backpacks, demonstrate this principle. They utilize the energy from human movement—which typically dissipates—and store it in a battery. This stored potential energy empowers users to operate devices whenever needed.

Book overview

Jump across lessons in the current chapter without opening the full course modal.

Continue this chapter

Chapter 1: What Is Energy?

  1. Lesson 1

    Lesson 1: Pre-Unit Assessment

  2. Lesson 2

    Lesson 2: Energy in Systems

  3. Lesson 3

    Lesson 3: Kinetic and Potential Energy

  4. Lesson 4Current

    Lesson 4: Reading: Energy Inventions