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1 Lecture #2 Questions on Assignment #1? Homework Expectations /Office hours Impulse and momentum conservation Rocket propulsion Worked problems Cross-product.

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Presentation on theme: "1 Lecture #2 Questions on Assignment #1? Homework Expectations /Office hours Impulse and momentum conservation Rocket propulsion Worked problems Cross-product."— Presentation transcript:

1 1 Lecture #2 Questions on Assignment #1? Homework Expectations /Office hours Impulse and momentum conservation Rocket propulsion Worked problems Cross-product problem Impulse and Momentum V-5-7 :10

2 2 Homework Bliss :17

3 3 Definition of Impulse Impulse is a useful concept in the study of collisions. (e.g. Balls and bats, automobiles, comets and planets) Impulse is the average force acting over a time period multiplied by the time period. It may also be written as an integral Note the difference between impulse and work W. :22

4 4 Impulse and momentum change Impulse is useful because it directly allows expression of momentum change. :27

5 5 Impulse I -- Problem #L2-2 “A car crash” Jack and Jill were ingesting things they shouldn’t while driving two cars of mass 1000 kg and 2000 kg with velocity vectors and We may look at their collision in terms of impulse. Jill’s car applied an impulse to Jack’s car as follows: What is the final momentum of Jack’s car only? What is his final velocity? Calculate :32

6 6 Rocket Science I  Not the whole story  More general – get used to it  Case where m not constant  Instantaneous acceleration, but rocket keeps getting lighter!! :40

7 7 Rocket Science II  In absence of other forces  Separable ODE. Integrate both sides  Rocket velocity in terms of lost mass and exhaust velocity :45

8 8 Rocket Science III  If a rocket is 60% fuel, then it limits at v e  If a rocket is 90% fuel, then limit at 2.3 v e  At 99% fuel, limit is 4.6 v e :50

9 9 Specific Impulse :45 :55

10 10 XIPS  Xenon Ion Propulsion System  Thrusts are 60-200 milliNewtons  Used for “station-keeping” and deep- space missions :45 :55

11 11 Problem T3.7 :65 The first couple of minutes after a space shuttle launch can be described as follows: The initial mass is 2x10E6 kg, the final mass (after 2 minutes) is about 1x10E6 kg, the average exhaust speed is about 3000 m/s. If all this were taking place in outer space, with negligible gravity, what would be the shuttle’s speed at the end of this stage? What is the thrust during this same period and how does it compare with the total initial weight of the shuttle (on earth)?

12 12 Impulse II -- Problem #L2-3 “Another car crash” Jack and Jill are partly recovered from their previous injuries, and haven’t learned from their experience. They are drinking cokes with Bacardi 151 and not wearing seat-belts. Jack’s vehicle has velocity vector Jill’s vehicle has Both vehicles’ mass=M. Both people’s mass=70 kg. Solve for case of inelastic and elastic collisions of vehicles. Jill has an airbag in her vehicle. It takes her 100 millisec to reduce her velocity relative to her vehicle to zero. Jack stops 5 millisec after impacting the steering wheel. What impulse does each person experience? What is average force for each? How many “g’s” do they feel. :75

13 13 Lecture #2 Wind-up. Got on WebCT? / Got Books? Office hours Wednesday 4-5:30 Homework problems in Taylor, Handout, Galileo problem – check the web. Second homework due in class Thursday 9/4 (Includes introducing gravity into rocket equation) :72


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