Linear Momentum Conservation of Momentum Collision Impulse
Linear Momentum Conservation of Momentum Collision Impulse
Linear Momentum Conservation of Momentum Collision Impulse
Linear Momentum
Conservation of momentum
collision
Impulse
Momentum
1. Definition of Momentum : quantity of
motion that an object has, if an object is
in motion ( on the move) then it has
momentum
• A sports team which is on the move has
the momentum. If an object is in motion
(on the move) then it has momentum.
Momentum Defined
p = mv
p = momentum vector
m = mass
v = velocity vector
• Momentum is a vector quantity!
• SI unit for momentum: kg · m /s
• Velocity and momentum vectors point in the same
direction.
• Momentum is a conserved quantity, meaning that in
a closed system, the momentum cannot change. (this
will be proven later).
• Momentum is a very important quantity when we are
dealing with collisions, because it is conserved in all
such cases.
Bus: m = 9000 kg; v = 16 m /s Car: m = 1800 kg; v = 80 m /s
p = 1.44 ·105 kg · m /s
p = 1.44 ·105 kg · m /s
m1 v1 - m2 v2 = - m1 va + m2 vb
after: p = - m1 va + m2 vb
va vb
m1 m2
Example 1:
A crate of raspberry donut filling collides with a tub of
lime Kool Aid on a frictionless surface. Which way on
how fast does the Kool Aid rebound? answer: Let’s
draw v to the right in the after picture.
before
10 m/s 6 m/s
3 kg 15 kg
4.5 m/s v
after
3 kg 15 kg
Collisions
• From engineering perspectives:
– Gas molecules bounce off each other and the
walls of their container.
– Air and turbine blades collide in a jet engine.
– Pile drivers are used to hammer building
foundations into the ground.
– Car crashes
• Theoretically, collision maybe elastic or
inelastic.
• Remember!! in both situation, the momentum
is conserved.
• But kinetic energy is not necessarily
conserved.
• We will deal only with collisions of two
bodies. We will also limit our discussion to
collisions occurring in one dimension. Such
collisions are called “head-on” collisions”.
Elastic collision