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Momentum
10-20-99
Momentum
There are two kinds of momentum, linear and angular. A spinning object
has angular momentum; an object traveling with a velocity has linear
momentum. For now, and throughout chapter 7, we'll deal with linear
momentum, and just refer to it as momentum, without the linear.
There are 4 really important things to know about momentum. The first is
how momentum is defined, as the product of mass times velocity:
momentum : p = mv
The second note is built into this equation; momentum is a vector, and the
momentum has the same direction as the velocity.
The third point is the relationship between momentum and force. We've
talked a lot about forces in the last few weeks, and there is a strong
connection between force and momentum. In fact, Newton's second law
was first written (by Newton himself, of course) in terms of momentum,
rather than acceleration. A force acting for a certain time (this is known as
an impulse) produces a change in momentum.
interacting objects. If a system does have a net force acting, then the
momentum changes according to the impulse equation.
The total energy is always conserved, but the kinetic energy does not have
to be; kinetic energy is often transformed to heat or sound during a
collision.
(a) Car crashes are often completely inelastic, with much of the kinetic
energy going into deforming the cars. Momentum is always conserved,
though, so, using c for car and t for truck, (and f for final) the conservation
of momentum equation is:
http://physics.bu.edu/~duffy/py105/Momentum.html 2/4
10/13/2017 Momentum
If we take east as the positive direction, then the truck's velocity goes into
the equation with a negative sign, so: vf = [ (1000) (30) + (3000) (-20) ] /
(1000 + 3000) = -7.5 m/s, which is 7.5 m/s west
The change in kinetic energy can be found by adding up the kinetic energy
before and after the collision:
(b) What would happen if the car and truck were both made out of rubber
and the collision was elastic, with no loss of kinetic energy. In this case the
calculations are a lot more complicated, because we have to combine the
energy conservation equation with the momentum conservation equation:
In this case, after some nice algebraic manipulation (which is worth trying
on your own), the final velocities of the car and truck work out to:
Note that if you were driving the car, you would experience a much greater
force in the case of an elastic collision than in a completely inelastic
collision, in which much of the energy is absorbed by the deformation of
the car. Let's say you have a mass of 50 kg, and that the collision lasts for
0.1 seconds. In the case of the completely inelastic collision, your
momentum would change from 50 kg x 30 m/s east = 1500 kg m/s east to
50 kg x 7.5 m/s west = -375 kg m/s east, which is a net change of 1875 kg
m/s. This change in momentum is produced by an average force acting for
the 0.1 s of the collision, so the force works out to 18750 N.
http://physics.bu.edu/~duffy/py105/Momentum.html 3/4
10/13/2017 Momentum
In the elastic collision, your momentum would change from 1500 kg m/s
east to 50 kg x 45 m/s west = -2250 kg m/s east, for a net change of 3750
kg m/s, exactly twice that in the completely inelastic case. The force you
would experience would therefore also be doubled.
Back to impulse
Before doing an example of a collision in 2 dimensions, let's look at a short
example of how the impulse equation is applied. Recall that impulse is a
force acting for a particular time, producing a change in momentum:
Note that is the water bounced off the wall and came back with a
momentum of 30 kg m/s towards the hose, that would represent a net
change in momentum of 60 kg m/s towards the hose, because momentum
is a vector. In that case the force exerted by the water on the wall would be
twice as high, 60 N.
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