Title: Momentum
1Momentum
2Friday, November 17, 2006
- Momentum and Momentum Change
3Momentum
- Momentum is a measure of how hard it is to stop
or turn a moving object. - Momentum is related to both mass and velocity.
- Momentum is possessed by all moving objects.
4Calculating Momentum
- For one particle
- p mv
- For a system of multiple particles
- P ?pi ?mivi
- Momentum is a vector with the same direction as
the velocity vector. - The unit of momentum is
- kg m/s or Ns
5Which has the most momentum?
6Sample Problem
- Calculate the momentum of a 65-kg sprinter
running east at 10 m/s.
7Sample Problem
- Calculate the momentum of a system composed of a
65-kg sprinter running east at 10 m/s and a 75-kg
sprinter running north at 9.5 m/s.
8Change in momentum
- Like any change, change in momentum is calculated
by looking at final and initial momentums. - Dp pf pi
- Dp change in momentum
- pf final momentum
- pi initial momentum
9Momentum change demonstration
- Using only a meter stick, find the momentum
change of each ball when it strikes the desk from
a height of exactly one meter. - Which ball, Bouncy or Lazy, has the greatest
change in momentum?
10Wording dilemma
- In which case is the magnitude of the momentum
change greatest? - In which case is the change in the magnitude of
the momentum greatest?
11Monday, November 20, 2006
12Announcements
- Exam corrections
- Today at lunch
- Monday and Tuesday (AM and Lunch)
- Tomorrow
- Geometric optics exam
- CW packet for optics is due
- Wednesday
- HW due (Momentum 1 and 2)
13Impulse (J)
- Impulse is the product of an external force and
time, which results in a change in momentum of a
particle or system. - J F t
- J ?P
- Units N s or kg m/s (same as momentum)
14Impulsive Forces
- Usually high magnitude, short duration.
- Suppose the ball hits the bat at 90 mph and
leaves the bat at 90 mph, what is the magnitude
of the momentum change? - What is the change in the magnitude of the
momentum?
15Impulse (J) on a graph
F(N)
3000
2000
area under curve
1000
0
0
1
2
3
4
t (ms)
16Sample Problem
- Suppose a 1.5-kg brick is dropped on a glass
table top from a height of 20 cm. - What is the magnitude and direction of the
impulse necessary to stop the brick? - If the table top doesnt shatter, and stops the
brick in 0.01 s, what is the average force it
exerts on the brick? - What is the average force that the brick exerts
on the table top during this period?
17Solution a)
- Find the velocity of the brick when it strikes
the table using conservation of energy. - mgh ½ mv2
- v (2gh)1/2 (29.8 m/s20.20 m) 1/2 2.0 m/s
- Calculate the bricks momentum when it strikes
the table. - p mv (1.5 kg)(2.0 m/s) 3.0 kg m/s (down)
- The impulse necessary to stop the brick is the
impulse necessary to change to momentum to zero. - J Dp pf pi 0 3.0 kg m/s -3.0 kg m/s
- or 3.0 kg m/s (up)
18Solution b) and c)
- b) Find the force using the other equation for
impulse. - J Ft
- 3.0 N s F (0.01 s)
- F 300 N (upward in the same direction as
impulse) - c) According the Newtons 3rd law, the brick
exerts an average force of 300 N downward on the
table.
19Sample Problem
F(N)
2,000
1,000
0.20
0.40
0.60
0.80
t(s)
- This force acts on a 1.2 kg object moving at
120.0 m/s. The direction of the force is aligned
with the velocity. What is the new velocity of
the object?
20Solution
- Find the impulse from the area under the curve.
- A ½ base height ½ (.1 s)(2500 N) 125 Ns
- J 125 N s
- Since impulse is equal to change in momentum and
it is in the same direction as the existing
momentum, the momentum increases by 125 kg m/s. - Dp 125 kg m/s
- Dp pf - pi mvf - mvi
- mvf mvi Dp
- (1.2 kg)(120 m/s) 125 kg m/s 269 kg
m/s - vf (269 kg m /s) / (1.2 kg) 224 m/s
21Wednesday, November 22, 2006
- Law of Conservation of Momentum
22Announcements
- Energy exam corrections
- Monday and Tuesday (AM and Lunch)
- Due today
- HW due -- Momentum 1 and 2
- Due next Wednesday
- Momentum 3 and 4
- Have a happy Thanksgiving!!!
23Law of Conservation of Momentum
- If the resultant external force on a system is
zero, then the vector sum of the momentums of the
objects will remain constant. - SPbefore SPafter
24Sample problem
- A 75-kg man sits in the back of a 120-kg canoe
that is at rest in a still pond. If the man
begins to move forward in the canoe at 0.50 m/s
relative to the shore, what happens to the canoe?
25Solution
- The momentum before the man moves is equal to the
momentum after the man moves. - Spb Spa
- 0 mmvm mcvc
- 0 (75 kg)(0.50 m/s) (120 kg)v
- v - (75 kg)(0.50 m/s)/(120 kg)
- v -0.31 m/s
- The canoe slips backward in the water at -0.31 m/s
26External versus internal forces
- External forces forces coming from outside the
system of particles whose momentum is being
considered. - External forces change the momentum of the
system. - Internal forces forces arising from interaction
of particles within a system. - Internal forces cannot change momentum of the
system.
27An external force in golf
- Consider the collision between the club head and
the golf ball in the sport of golf. - The club head exerts an external impulsive force
on the ball and changes its momentum.
- The acceleration of the ball is greater because
its mass is smaller.
28An internal force in pool
- Consider the collision between two balls in pool.
- The forces they exert on each other are internal
and do not change the momentum of the system.
- Since the balls have equal masses, the magnitude
of their accelerations is equal.
29Explosions
- When an object separates suddenly, as in an
explosion, all forces are internal. - Momentum is therefore conserved in an explosion.
- There is also an increase in kinetic energy in an
explosion. This comes from a potential energy
decrease due to chemical combustion.
30Recoil
- Guns and cannons recoil when fired.
- This means the gun or cannon must move backward
as it propels the projectile forward. - The recoil is the result of action-reaction force
pairs, and is entirely due to internal forces. - As the gases from the gunpowder explosion expand,
they push the projectile forwards and the gun or
cannon backwards.
31Sample problem
- Suppose a 5.0-kg projectile launcher shoots a 209
gram projectile at 350 m/s. What is the recoil
velocity of the projectile launcher?
32Solution
- Momentum conservation is used to calculate recoil
speed. - Spb Spa
- 0 mpvp mlvl
- 0 (0.209 kg)(350 m/s) (5.0 kg)v
- v - (0.209 kg)(350 m/s)/(5.0 kg)
- v - 14.6 m/s
33Sample Problem
- An exploding object breaks into three fragments.
A 2.0 kg fragment travels north at 200 m/s. A 4.0
kg fragment travels east at 100 m/s. The third
fragment has mass 3.0 kg. What is the magnitude
and direction of its velocity?
34Solution
- The momentum before is zero, so the momentum
after is zero. - This is a vector addition problem. Each fragment
has a momentum magnitude of 400 kg m/s according
to the formula p mv.
v p/m 566/3 189 m/s due SW
(4002 4002)1/2 566 kg m/s due southwest
35Monday, November27, 2006
36Announcements
- Exam corrections
- Today and Tuesday (AM and Lunch)
- Tonights assignment
- Momentum 4
37Sample problem
- An exploding object breaks into three fragments.
A 2.0 kg fragment travels north at 200 m/s. A 4.0
kg fragment travels east at 100 m/s. The third
fragment has mass 3.0 kg. What is the magnitude
and direction of its velocity?
38Today
- Bumper cars demo lab.
- You will need to be clever and quick as you
attempt to simulate various types of collisions
using the carts and cart track. - For each collision type, you will be given a few
minutes to create the simulation and answer the
associated questions. - You are not to harm the carts or each other in
your simulations.
39Simulation 1
- Your mission Create a situation in which an
impulse changes the momentum of a moving cart.
You express (a) the magnitude of the momentum
change, and (b) the change in the magnitude of
the momentum in terms of m and v. You must
identify the force causing the impulse. - Rule 1 Use just one cart.
- Rule 2 No kinetic energy may be lost or gained
by the cart in this collision.
40Simulation 2
- Your mission Create a situation in which an
impulse changes the momentum of a moving cart.
You express (a) the magnitude of the momentum
change, and (b) the change in the magnitude of
the momentum in terms of m and v. You must
identify the force causing the impulse. - Rule 1 Use just one cart.
- Rule 2 All kinetic energy must be lost by the
cart in this collision.
41Simulation 3
- Your mission Create a collision between two
carts in which momentum and kinetic energy (of
the system of two carts) are both conserved. You
must be able to express momentum and kinetic
energy of each cart before and after the
collision. - Rule 1 One cart must lose ALL of its momentum
and kinetic energy in this simulation.
42Simulation 4
- Your mission Create a collision between two
carts in which the following happens - Rule 1 The two carts become one cart.
- Rule 2 The system of two carts loses all of its
kinetic energy. - Be prepared to identify the initial and final
momentum and kinetic energy of the carts in terms
of m and v.
43Simulation 5
- Your mission Create simulation of an explosion
creating two equal mass fragments. You must
express (a) the initial and final momentum of the
system and (b) the final momentum of each of the
fragments. - Rule 1 Kinetic energy must be zero initially.
- Rule 2 You must identify the source of the
kinetic energy using Conservation of Energy
thinking.
44Collisions
- When two moving objects make contact with each
other, they undergo a collision. - Conservation of momentum is used to analyze all
collisions. - Newtons Third Law is also useful. It tells us
that the force exerted by body A on body B in a
collision is equal and opposite to the force
exerted on body B by body A.
45Collisions
- During a collision, external forces are ignored.
- The time frame of the collision is very short.
- The forces are impulsive forces (high force,
short duration).
46Collision Types
- Elastic collisions
- Also called hard collisions
- No deformation occurs, no kinetic energy lost
- Inelastic collisions
- Deformation occurs, kinetic energy is lost
- Perfectly Inelastic (stick together)
- Objects stick together and become one object
- Deformation occurs, kinetic energy is lost
47(Perfectly) Inelastic Collisions
- Simplest type of collisions.
- After the collision, there is only one velocity,
since there is only one object. - Kinetic energy is lost.
- Explosions are the reverse of perfectly inelastic
collisions in which kinetic energy is gained!
48Sample Problem
- An 80-kg roller skating grandma collides
inelastically with a 40-kg kid. What is their
velocity after the collision?
49Tuesday, November 28, 2006
50Announcements
- Exam corrections
- Tuesday (AM and Lunch)
- Tonights assignment
- Momentum 5
- Lunch Bunch tomorrow
51Sample Problem
- A train of mass 4m moving 5 km/hr couples with a
flatcar of mass m at rest. What is the velocity
of the cars after they couple?
52Sample Problem
- A fish moving at 2 m/s swallows a stationary fish
which is 1/3 its mass. What is the velocity of
the big fish and after dinner?
53Elastic Collision
- After the collision, there are still two objects,
with two separate velocities - Kinetic energy remains constant before and after
the collision. - Therefore, two basic equations must hold for all
elastic collisions - Spb Spa (momentum conservation)
- SKb SKa (kinetic energy conservation)
54Sample Problem
- A pool ball traveling at speed v strikes a second
pool ball at rest such that the first pool ball
stops completely. Show that the second pool ball
now must have speed v. Assume that the collision
is elastic.
55Sample Problem
- A 500-g cart on an air track strikes a 1,000-g
cart at rest. What are the resulting velocities
of the two carts? (Assume the collision is
elastic, and the first cart is moving at 2.0 m/s
when the collision occurs.)
56Solution
- before after
- m1v1 m1v1 m2v2
- 1.0 0.50v1 v2
- ½ m1 v12 ½ m1v12 ½
m2v22 - 2.0 0.50v12 v22
- Solve simultaneously
- v1 -0.67 m/s
- v2 1.33 m/s
57Sample Problem
- Suppose three equally strong, equally massive
astronauts decide to play a game as follows The
first astronaut throws the second astronaut
towards the third astronaut and the game begins.
Describe the motion of the astronauts as the game
proceeds. Assume each toss results from the
same-sized "push." How long will the game last?
58Thursday, November 30
59Announcements
- Friday
- HW 3-5 will be checked
- Lab report (partial) due
- Monday
- HW quiz
- Second two free response from packet are due at
the beginning of the period - Tuesday
- Momentum exam
60Lab turn in data, calculations, and results only
- Analyze collisions of the carts in terms of
momentum and energy conservation. - 3 or 4 Trials
- Perfectly inelastic collision equal masses
- Perfectly inelastic collision unequal masses
- Elastic collision equal masses
- Elastic collision unequal masses (BONUS!!)
- Clearly show all data collected (mass, width,
time) for each trial - Clearly show a comparison of the momentum before
and after collision. - Clearly show a comparison of kinetic energy
before and after collision.
61Friday, December 1
62Announcements
- Lab write-up due pass forward
- Put boot homework in folder.
- Coming up
- HW quiz on Monday
- Free response due Monday
- Exam on Momentum next Tuesday. Makeup exams for
English Essay people are at lunch the same day.
Field trip people take it the day before at
lunch. - Momentum Jeopardy
632D-Collisions
- Momentum in the x-direction is conserved.
- SPx (before) SPx (after)
- Momentum in the y-direction is conserved.
- SPy (before) SPy (after)
- Treat x and y coordinates independently.
- Ignore x when calculating y
- Ignore y when calculating x
- Lets look at a simulation
- http//surendranath.tripod.com/Applets.html
64Sample problem
- Calculate velocity of 8-kg ball after the
collision.
2 m/s
y
2 kg
y
3 m/s
50o
x
x
2 kg
8 kg
0 m/s
8 kg
v
After
Before