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Perpetual motion - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Robert Fludd's 1618 "water screw" perpetual motion machine from a 1660 woodcut. ... 3 Apparent perpetual motion machines. 4 Ubiquitous energy from atomic and ...
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The Perpetual Motion Machine - Index
... it as a cassette on Perpetual Motion Machine, which is finished and now ... Paul / The Perpetual Motion Machine. The Perpetual Motion Machine 2008 ...
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The term perpetual motion, taken literally, refers to movement that goes on forever. This is possible in the current theoretical understanding of physics as in Newton's First Law of Motion. However, perpetual motion usually refers to a device or system that delivers more energy than is put into it. Such a device or system would be in violation of the law of Conservation of Energy, which states that energy can never be created or destroyed, and is therefore deemed impossible by mainstream physics. The most conventional type of perpetual motion machine is a mechanical system which (supposedly) sustains motion whilst inevitably losing energy to friction and air resistance.

Basic principles Perpetual motion machines violate one or both of the following two laws of physics: the first law of thermodynamics and the second law of thermodynamics. The first law of thermodynamics is essentially a statement of conservation of energy. The second law has several statements, the most intuitive of which is that heat flows spontaneously from hotter to colder places; the most well known is that entropy tends to increase, or at the least stays the same; another statement is that no heat engine (an engine which produces work while moving heat between two places) can be more efficient than a Carnot heat engine. As a special case of this, any machine operating in a closed cycle cannot only transform thermal energy to work in a region of constant temperature.

Machines which are claimed not to violate either of the two laws of thermodynamics but rather are claimed to generate energy from unconventional sources are sometimes referred to as perpetual motion machines, although they do not meet the standard criteria for the name. By way of example, it is quite possible to design a clock or other low-power machine to run on the differences in barometric pressure or temperature between night and day Cox's timepiece. Such a machine has a source of energy, albeit one from which it is quite impractical to produce power in quantity.

Classification It is customary to classify perpetual motion machines as follows:
  • A perpetual motion machine of the first kind produces strictly more energy than it uses, giving the user unlimited energy. It thus violates the law of conservation of energy. Over-unity devices, that is, devices with a thermodynamic efficiency greater than 1.0 (unity, or 100%), are perpetual motion machines of this kind.
  • A perpetual motion machine of the second kind is a machine which spontaneously converts thermal energy into mechanical work. This need not violate the law of conservation of energy, since the thermal energy may be equivalent to the work done; however it does violate the more subtle second law of thermodynamics (see also entropy). Note that such a machine is different from real heat engines (such as car engines), which always involve a transfer of heat from a hotter reservoir to a colder one, the latter being warmed up in the process. The signature of a perpetual motion machine of the second kind is that there is only one single heat reservoir involved, which is being spontaneously cooled without involving a transfer of heat to a cooler reservoir. This conversion of heat into useful work, without any side effect, is impossible by the second law of thermodynamics.


  • In an otherwise completely empty Newtonian universe, a single particle could travel forever at constant velocity with no violation of the laws of physics – though of course no energy could be extracted from it without slowing it down. For example, in an isolated system consisting of two objects orbiting each other gravitationally, the two objects will remain orbiting forever, as long as they are not disturbed. However any attempt to extract useful work from this system would lead to a loss of energy. This would result in the objects slowing down and getting closer to each other, until at some point the objects would collapse together and no more energy would remain to extract.

    Use of the term "impossible" and perpetual motion Scientists and engineers accept the possibility that the current understanding of the laws of physics may be incomplete or incorrect; a perpetual motion device may not be impossible, but overwhelming evidence would be required to justify rewriting the laws of physics.

    The conservation laws are particularly robust. Noether's theorem is actually a proof that any conservation law can be derived from any continuous symmetry. In other words, as long as the laws of physics (not simply the current understanding of them, but the actual laws, which may still be undiscovered) and the various physical constants remain invariant over time -- as long as the laws of the universe are fixed -- then the conservation laws must be true, in the sense that they follow from the presupposition using mathematical logic. Essentially, literally most of what we believe to be true about physics, mathematics or both would have to be false.

    The principles of thermodynamics are so well established, both theoretically and experimentally, that proposals for perpetual motion machines are universally met with disbelief on the part of physicists. Any proposed perpetual motion design offers a potentially instructive challenge to physicists: we are almost completely certain that it can't work, so we must explain how it fails to work. The difficulty (and the value) of such an exercise depends on the subtlety of the proposal; the best ones tend to arise from physicists' own thought experiments and often shed light into unique aspects of physics. See the Perpetual motion#Thought experiments.

    ::::::::::::--Sir Arthur Stanley Eddington, The Nature of the Physical World (1927) Thought experiments Serious work in theoretical physics often involves thought experiments that test the boundaries of understanding of physical laws. Some such thought experiments involve apparent perpetual motion machines, and insight may be had from understanding why they either don't work or don't violate the laws of physics. For example: Maxwell's demon A thought experiment which led to physicists' considering the interaction between entropy and information.Richard Feynman's "Brownian ratchet" A "perpetual motion" machine which extracts work from thermal fluctuations and appears to run forever but only runs as long as the environment is warmer than the ratchet.Self-perpetuating cosmic inflation Andrei Linde has proposed that during the theoretical period of cosmic inflation in the early universe, quantum fluctuations in energy could be magnified by the very inflationary process, preventing the global cooling trend from ever being fully consummated. This would violate both the first and second laws of thermodynamics; indeed, it may constitute the origin of a low-entropy past that gets the second law going in the first place. However, a machine to harness this principle would have several serious flaws. It would need to use unimaginable amounts of energy (on at least a Planck units); it might have cataclysmic consequences to the area around it for an unknown distance (there is not a prior natural limit to the scale of the damage); and at least the majority and possibly all the energy it generated would be in a newly-created universe which might be inaccessibly far away along a wormhole.

    Techniques Some ideas recur repeatedly in perpetual motion machine designs. For instance:

    The seemingly mysterious ability of magnets to influence motion at a distance without any apparent energy source has long appealed to inventors. However, a constant magnetic field can do no work (physics) because the force it exerts on a charged particle is always at right angles to its motion; a changing field can do work, but requires energy to sustain. A "fixed" magnet can do work, but energy is dissipated in the process, typically weakening the magnet's strength over time. Thus, when a magnet does work by lifting an iron weight, potential energy is converted to kinetic energy. Once the iron hits the magnet its kinetic energy is converted to heat and sound. In order to release further energy, the iron must be moved away from the magnet. This converts the energy of your arm to potential energy again. Since the energy of parting the magnet and iron is identical to the energy released as the magnet and iron come together, no net energy can be gained by changing the iron - magnet distance.

    (about 1230).

    Gravity also acts at a distance, without an apparent energy source. But to get energy out of a gravitational field (for instance, by dropping a heavy object, producing kinetic energy as it falls) you have to put energy in (for instance, by lifting the object up), and some energy is always dissipated in the process. A typical application of gravity in a perpetual motion machine is Bhaskara II's wheel in the 12th century, whose key idea is itself a recurring theme, often called the overbalanced wheel: Moving weights are attached to a wheel in such a way that they fall to a position further from the wheel's center for one half of the wheel's rotation, and closer to the center for the other half. Since weights further from the center apply a greater torque, the result is (or would be, if such a device worked) that the wheel rotates forever. The moving weights may be hammers on pivoted arms, or rolling balls, or mercury in tubes; the principle is the same.

    Gravity and magnetism are an attractive combination indeed, and a frequently rediscovered design has a ball pulled up by a magnetic field and then rolling down under the influence of gravity, in a cycle. (At the highest point, the ball is supposed to have acquired enough speed to escape the magnet's influence.)

    Yet another theoretical machine involves a frictionless environment for motion. This involves the use of diamagnetic or electromagnet levitation to float an object. This is done in a vacuum to eliminate air friction and friction from an axle. The levitated object is then free to rotate around its center of gravity without interference. However, this machine has no practical purpose because the rotated object cannot do any work as work requires the levitated object to cause motion in other objects, bringing friction into the problem.

    To extract work from heat, thus producing a perpetual motion machine of the second kind, the most common approach (dating back at least to Maxwell's demon) is unidirectionality. Only molecules moving fast enough and in the right direction are allowed through the demon's trap door. In a Brownian ratchet, forces tending to turn the ratchet one way are able to do so while forces in the other direction aren't. A diode in a heat bath allows through currents in one direction and not the other. These schemes typically fail in two ways: either maintaining the unidirectionality costs energy (Maxwell's demon needs light to look at all those particles and see what they're doing), or the unidirectionality is an illusion and occasional big violations make up for the frequent small non-violations (the Brownian ratchet will be subject to internal Brownian forces and therefore will sometimes turn the wrong way).

    Invention history .The recorded history of perpetual motion machines date back to the 12th century. Proponents of perpetual motion machines use a number of other terms to describe their inventions, including "Second law of thermodynamics" and "over unity" machines. The earliest references to perpetual motion machines date back to 1150, by an Indian Indian mathematics-astronomer, Bhāskara II. He described a wheel that he claimed would run forever. Villard de Honnecourt in 1235 described, in a thirty-three page manuscript, a perpetual motion machine of the second kind. Robert Boyle's self-flowing flask appears to fill itself through siphon action. This is not possible in reality; a siphon requires its "output" to be lower than the "input".

    In 1775 Royal Academy of Sciences in Paris issued the statement that Academy "will no longer accept or deal with proposals concerning perpetual motion". Johann Bessler (also known as Orffyreus) created a series of claimed perpetual motion machines in the 18th Century. In the 19th century, the invention of perpetual motion machines became an obsession for many scientists. Many machines were designed based on electricity, but none of them lived up to their promises. Another early prospector in this field was John Gamgee. Gamgee developed the Zeromotor, a perpetual motion machine of the second kind.

    Devising these machines is a favourite pastime of many eccentricity (behaviour)s, who often come up with elaborate machines in the style of Rube Goldberg or Heath Robinson. These designs may appear to work on paper at first glance. Usually, though, various flaws or obfuscated external power sources have been incorporated into the machine. Such activity has made them useless in the practice of "invention".

    Patents Devising such inoperable machines has become common enough that the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) has made an official policy of refusing to grant patents for perpetual motion machines without a working model. One reason for this concern, according to various skeptics, is that a few "inventors" have used official patents to convince gullible potential investors that their machine is "approved" by the Patent Office. The USPTO Manual of Patent Examining Practice states: With the exception of cases involving perpetual motion, a model is not ordinarily required by the Office to demonstrate the operability of a device. If operability of a device is questioned, the applicant must establish it to the satisfaction of the patent examiner, but he or she may choose his or her own way of so doing. 608.03 Models, Exhibits, Specimens R-3 - 600 Parts, Form, and Content of Application And, further, that: A rejection a patent application on the ground of lack of utility includes the more specific grounds of inoperativeness, involving perpetual motion. A rejection under 35 U.S.C. 101 for lack of utility should not be based on grounds that the invention is frivolous, fraudulent or against public policy. 706.03(a) Rejections Under 35 U.S.C. 101 R-3 - 700 Examination of Applications II. UTILITY The USPTO has granted a few patents for motors that are claimed to run without net energy input. These patents were issued because, skeptics claim, it was not obvious from the patent that a perpetual motion machine was being claimed. Some of these are:

    {| align="right" border="1" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" style="margin: 1em 1em 1em 1em; background: #f9f9f9; border: 1px #aaa solid; border-collapse: collapse;"! Howard R. Johnson, U.S. Patent 4,151,431|-||}



    Other patent offices around the world have similar practices, such as the United Kingdom Patent Office. Section 4.05 of the UKPO Manual of Patent Practice states: Processes or articles alleged to operate in a manner which is clearly contrary to well-established physical laws, such as perpetual motion machines, are regarded as not having industrial application.http://www.patent.gov.uk/practice-sec-004.pdf Examples of decisions by the UK Patent Office to refuse patent applications for perpetual motion machines include: Decision BL O/044/06, John Frederick Willmott's application no. 0502841 Decision BL O/150/06, Ezra Shimshi's application no. 0417271

    Apparent "perpetual motion" machines Even though they fully respect the laws of thermodynamics, there are a few conceptual or real devices that appear to be in "perpetual motion", while a closer analysis reveals them to actually "consume" some sort of natural resource or latent energy like the phase changes of water or other fluids, solar power and natural, small temperature gradients. In general, extracting useful work out of similar devices is very hard or almost impossible, as those devices usually work with low-grade heat and with very low efficiency.

    So, these devices can mostly be classified as low-power, low-efficiency energy converters (not free energy producers) which are able to use low grade energy sources, but which would be impractical or impossible to use at a large scale for mass energy production, as efficiency would be extremely low, as well as any power output- if any.

    Some examples of real such devices include:

    Some examples of imaginary such devices:

    In all of these cases the "free" energy would, in any case, come from "lesser" forms of energy already present in the environment in small quantities, and the net power outputs would be extremely small to build a large-scale generator. While it certainly is possible to convert some of the ambient's low-grade heat into useful work, that would not be, by definition, "perpetual motion", and the efficiencies are so low that such devices can only be used as toys or novelty items.

    Perpetual motion in popular culture



































    Gallery This is a gallery of some of the perpetual motion machine plans.Image:Perpetuum1.png|The "Overbalanced Wheel". It was thought that the metal balls on the right side would turn the wheel because of gravity, but since the left side had more balls than the right side, the weight was balanced and the perpetual movement could not be done.Image:Perpetuum2.png|The "Float Belt". The yellow blocks indicate floaters. It was thought that the floaters would rise through the liquid and turn the belt. However pushing the floaters into the water at the bottom would require energy.Image:Boyle'sSelfFlowingFlask.png|The "Capillary Bowl". It was thought that the capillary action would keep the water flowing in the tube, but since the mass of the water is bigger than the power that the capillary action could generate, the movement will not be perpetual.Image:Sandwheel.gif|The "Sand Tube Magical Wheel". The black parts indicate sands. It was planned to be a replacement after the original Magic wheel failed. It works with the same theory of the original wheel, and ends up the same.

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    Notes

    References | author=[Veljko Milković and Nebojša Simin | url=http://www.veljkomilkovic.com/KnjigeEng.html#perpetum | title=Perpetuum mobile | publisher=Novi Sad (Serbia), Vrelo | date=2001 -->

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