PHYS16 – Lecture 21 Ch. 9 Momentum and Collisions
Linear Momentum – Related to Newton’s second law – Rocket Propulsion Momentum Conservation Collisions – Elastic vs. Inelastic – 1D and 2D Impulse Ch. 9 Momentum & Collisions
Momentum pre-question Consider two carts on a frictionless air track with masses m and 2m. If you push the lower mass cart for 3 s and then the other cart for the same length of time and with the same force, which cart undergoes the larger change in momentum? A)Cart with mass m B)Cart with mass 2m C)Change in momentum is the same for both D)There is not enough information
Solve Problems with Collisions Read problem carefully! Draw a picture. Write down given quantities and what you want to solve for. Find the correct equation (conservation of momentum and possibly conservation of energy). Do the math and solve!
Perfectly Elastic Collision A 1.00-kg ball traveling at 3.00 m/s collides with a 3.00-kg ball traveling at m/s. If after a perfectly elastic collision the 1.00-kg ball is traveling at m/s, how fast is the second ball going? How do we check to see if it is perfectly elastic?
Perfectly Inelastic Collision How fast would a 5-g fly have to be traveling to slow a 1900-kg car traveling at 55 mph to 50 mph if the fly just splatted across the windshield?
Superball vs. Basketball Drop a superball and basketball together. How high does the superball bounce? Homework problem…
For Problems with multiple parts… Follow the steps for solving problems as before When you get to what equation to use break the problem into parts – usually chronologically – and solve each part Then do the math as before…
Click-Clack In a click-clack if all balls have equal mass and I take one ball out and put it at height 4 m, how high should the ball on the other side go? A) 4 m B) 2 m C) 1 m D) 0 m E) Not enough information
Click-Clack
Click-Clack In a click-clack if all balls have equal mass and I take one ball out and put it at height 4 m, how high should the ball on the other side go? A) 4 m B) 2 m C) 1 m D) 0 m E) Not enough information
Smith & Wesson On homework there is a problem about how far a chair slides when a bullet gets shot into it. What demo does this remind you of? What are the parts you will need to know?
2D collisions – How to solve problems Separate vectors into x and y components Solve two equations – Conservation of momentum in x and – Conservation of momentum in y If perfectly elastic get a third equation – Conservation of energy
2D Collisions Need to add 2D vectors Assume masses of two objects equal – Before – After A B C
2D Collisions – Predict vectors, assume masses are equal A B
2D Collision problem A 0.25 kg hockey puck traveling at 1.5 m/s strikes a stationary puck with the same mass. If the first puck exits at 30 degrees and 0.75 m/s, what is the direction of the second puck?
3. Impulse Impulse describes the change in momentum – Good for describing what happens during a collision Example: – What is momentum of 0.5 kg ball dropped from 5 m just before it hits the floor? – If the velocity after it hits the floor is +8 m/s upward, what is the impulse? – If the interaction lasts 0.01 s, what was the average Force?
During Collisions… Baseball Soccer ball Water balloon?
Discussion Why does an airbag reduce injury? What is better in bungee jumping- a stiff cable that won’t break at high forces or a stretchy cable? Why should a boxer “ride the punch” and not stiffen her neck muscles?
Momentum pre-question A 0.50 kg ball accelerates from rest at 10.0 m/s 2 for 2.0 s. It then collides with and sticks to a 1.0 kg ball that is initially at rest. After the collision, how fast are the balls going? A) 3.3 m/s B) 6.7 m/s C) 10 m/s D) 15 m/s E) None of the above.
Momentum pre-question Consider two carts on a frictionless air track with masses m and 2m. If you push the lower mass cart for 3 s and then the other cart for the same length of time and with the same force, which cart undergoes the larger change in momentum? A)Cart with mass m B)Cart with mass 2m C)Change in momentum is the same for both D)There is not enough information
Conclusions Momentum Momentum Conservation Elastic vs. Inelastic Collisions Impulse