physics 121 7. linear momentum 7.1 momentum and its relation to force 7.2 conservation of momentum...

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Physics 121

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Page 1: Physics 121 7. Linear Momentum 7.1 Momentum and its relation to Force 7.2 Conservation of Momentum 7.3 Collisions and Impulse 7.4 Conservation of Energy

Physics 121

Page 2: Physics 121 7. Linear Momentum 7.1 Momentum and its relation to Force 7.2 Conservation of Momentum 7.3 Collisions and Impulse 7.4 Conservation of Energy

7. Linear Momentum

7.1 Momentum and its relation to Force

7.2 Conservation of Momentum

7.3 Collisions and Impulse

7.4 Conservation of Energy and Momentum

7.5 Elastic Collisions

7.6 Inelastic Collisions

7.7 Solving Collision Problems

7.8 Center of Mass

Page 3: Physics 121 7. Linear Momentum 7.1 Momentum and its relation to Force 7.2 Conservation of Momentum 7.3 Collisions and Impulse 7.4 Conservation of Energy

Linear Momentum

Linear Momentum = mass x velocity

p = mv

Page 4: Physics 121 7. Linear Momentum 7.1 Momentum and its relation to Force 7.2 Conservation of Momentum 7.3 Collisions and Impulse 7.4 Conservation of Energy

Conservation of Momentum

Law of Conservation of Momentum

In a collision, momentum BEFORE the collision equals the momentum AFTER the

collision

Page 5: Physics 121 7. Linear Momentum 7.1 Momentum and its relation to Force 7.2 Conservation of Momentum 7.3 Collisions and Impulse 7.4 Conservation of Energy

Example 7.1 . . . The Odd Couple I

A model railroad car (mass = 100 g), moving at 4 m/s, collides and locks onto a similar stationary car. The coupled cars move as a unit on a straight and frictionless track. The speed of the moving cars is most nearly

A. 1 m/sB. 2 m/sC. 3 m/sD. 4 m/s

Page 6: Physics 121 7. Linear Momentum 7.1 Momentum and its relation to Force 7.2 Conservation of Momentum 7.3 Collisions and Impulse 7.4 Conservation of Energy

Solution 7.1 . . . The Odd Couple I

Momentum BEFORE = Momentum AFTER100 x 4 +0 = 200 x vv = 2 m/s

Page 7: Physics 121 7. Linear Momentum 7.1 Momentum and its relation to Force 7.2 Conservation of Momentum 7.3 Collisions and Impulse 7.4 Conservation of Energy

Example 7.2 . . . The Odd Couple II

Is the K.E. BEFORE = K.E. AFTER?

In other words, is the K.E. conserved in this collision?

Page 8: Physics 121 7. Linear Momentum 7.1 Momentum and its relation to Force 7.2 Conservation of Momentum 7.3 Collisions and Impulse 7.4 Conservation of Energy

Solution 7.2 . . . The Odd Couple II

K.E. BEFORE the collision = (1/2)(0.1)(16) +0 = 0.8 J

K.E. AFTER the collision = (1/2)(0.2)(4) +0 = 0.4 J

Half of the K.E. has mysteriously disappeared!

Note: However, this does not mean that ENERGY is not conserved! K.E. was transformed (converted) into other forms of energy.

Page 9: Physics 121 7. Linear Momentum 7.1 Momentum and its relation to Force 7.2 Conservation of Momentum 7.3 Collisions and Impulse 7.4 Conservation of Energy

Close collisions of the second kind ...

There are TWO types of collisions

I. Momentum conserved and K.E. also conserved. This type is called an ELASTIC collision. Elastic collisions are “non-sticky” as in billiard balls or steel ball-bearings.

II. Momentum conserved BUT K.E. NOT conserved. This type is called an INELASTIC collision. Inelastic collisions are “sticky” as in coupled railroad cars and putty.

Page 10: Physics 121 7. Linear Momentum 7.1 Momentum and its relation to Force 7.2 Conservation of Momentum 7.3 Collisions and Impulse 7.4 Conservation of Energy

Example 7.3 . . . Hockey Puck

Two hockey pucks collide elastically on ice. P2 is at rest and P1 strikes it “head-on” with a speed of 3 m/s.

A. P1 stops and and P2 moves forward at 3 m/sB. P1 and P2 move forward at 1.5 m/sC. P1 and P2 move in opposite directions at 1.5 m/sD. P1 moves forward at 1 m/s and P2 moves forward at 2 m/s

Page 11: Physics 121 7. Linear Momentum 7.1 Momentum and its relation to Force 7.2 Conservation of Momentum 7.3 Collisions and Impulse 7.4 Conservation of Energy

Solution 7.3 . . . Hockey Puck

A. P1 stops and P2 moves forward at 3 m/s.

Please verify that:1. Momentum is conserved2. K.E. is also conserved (elastic)

Page 12: Physics 121 7. Linear Momentum 7.1 Momentum and its relation to Force 7.2 Conservation of Momentum 7.3 Collisions and Impulse 7.4 Conservation of Energy

Equations for Head-on Collision

Momentum is conserved(Always!)m1 v1 + m2 v2 = m1 v1'+ m2 v2'

K.E. is conserved (Elastic)1/2 m1 (v1 )2 + 1/2 m2 (v2 )2 = 1/2 m1 (v1')2 + 1/2 m2(v2')2

Momentum and K.E. BOTH conserved (Elastic)v1 - v2 = v2'- v1'

Page 13: Physics 121 7. Linear Momentum 7.1 Momentum and its relation to Force 7.2 Conservation of Momentum 7.3 Collisions and Impulse 7.4 Conservation of Energy

Example 7.3 … one more time!

Work out Example 7.3 using:

v1 - v2 = v2'- v1'

and see how effortless it is to arrive at the correct answer!

Page 14: Physics 121 7. Linear Momentum 7.1 Momentum and its relation to Force 7.2 Conservation of Momentum 7.3 Collisions and Impulse 7.4 Conservation of Energy

Impulse

O.K. good boys and girls. Here is everything you always wanted to know about momentum but were afraid to ask!

In the beginning there was F = maSo F = m(vf - vi) / t

If F = 0 mvf = mvi

If F is 0 mvf - mvi = F x t Change in momentum = F x t = IMPULSE

Page 15: Physics 121 7. Linear Momentum 7.1 Momentum and its relation to Force 7.2 Conservation of Momentum 7.3 Collisions and Impulse 7.4 Conservation of Energy

Example 7.4 . . . Tiger in the woods

A golf ball has a mass of 48 g. The force exerted by the club vs. time is a sharp spike that peaks at 180 N for 0.01 s and then drops back to zero as the ball leaves the club head at high speed. It is estimated that the average force is 90 N over a short time (t) of 0.04 s. The speed of the ball is

A. 35 m/sB. 75 m/sC. 95 m/sD. 135 m/s

Page 16: Physics 121 7. Linear Momentum 7.1 Momentum and its relation to Force 7.2 Conservation of Momentum 7.3 Collisions and Impulse 7.4 Conservation of Energy

Solution7.4 . . . Impulse to ride the tiger

Impulse = F t = 90 x 0.04 = 3.6 Ns

Impulse = change in momentum

3.6 = mv -0

3.6 = 0.048 x v

v = 75 m/s

Page 17: Physics 121 7. Linear Momentum 7.1 Momentum and its relation to Force 7.2 Conservation of Momentum 7.3 Collisions and Impulse 7.4 Conservation of Energy

Example 7.5 . . . Teeter-Totter

0 20 50 100

180 120

FB weighs 180 pounds and sits at the 20 cm. mark. Where should SP (120 pounds) sit in order to balance the teeter-totter at the playground?

Page 18: Physics 121 7. Linear Momentum 7.1 Momentum and its relation to Force 7.2 Conservation of Momentum 7.3 Collisions and Impulse 7.4 Conservation of Energy

Solution 7.5 . . . See-Saw

30 x 180 = what x 120

what = 45 or 95 cm. mark

0 20 50 100

180 120

Page 19: Physics 121 7. Linear Momentum 7.1 Momentum and its relation to Force 7.2 Conservation of Momentum 7.3 Collisions and Impulse 7.4 Conservation of Energy

Example 7.6 . . . Center of Mass

100300

0 20 50 80 100?

The C.M. is a weighted average position of a distribution of masses where the system can

be balanced.

Where is the C.M.?

Page 20: Physics 121 7. Linear Momentum 7.1 Momentum and its relation to Force 7.2 Conservation of Momentum 7.3 Collisions and Impulse 7.4 Conservation of Energy

Solution 7.6 . . . Center of Mass

(100)( x -20) = (300)(80 - x)

x = (100) (20) + (300)( 80) / (100 + 300)

x = 65

0 20 50 80 100

100300

x

Page 21: Physics 121 7. Linear Momentum 7.1 Momentum and its relation to Force 7.2 Conservation of Momentum 7.3 Collisions and Impulse 7.4 Conservation of Energy

A formula for C.M.

C.M. = M1 * X1 + M2 * X2

M1 + M2

0 X1 50 X2 100

M 1M 2

C.M..

Page 22: Physics 121 7. Linear Momentum 7.1 Momentum and its relation to Force 7.2 Conservation of Momentum 7.3 Collisions and Impulse 7.4 Conservation of Energy

That’s all folks!