Lecture 8: Momentum, Impulse, and Collisions
Lecture 8: Momentum, Impulse, and Collisions
Collisions impulse
- Changes in momentum are due to time
Momentum and Impulse
over which the force acts
- Which could potentially cause you - Momentum is the impulse that
greater injury: Bumped by a fast moving accelerated an object from rest
car, or bumped by a car with the double
Work-KE Theorem
the mass but moving at half the speed?
- Kinetic energy changes when work is
⃗p=m⃗v
done
- Measure of the quantity of motion - Total work depends on distance over
- Depends on mass and velocity which force acts
- A vector > same direction as velocity - Kinetic energy is the total work done to
- Momentum in component form: accelerate an object from rest
p x =mv x Momentum and Kinetic Energy
Compared
p y =mv y
Which is easier to catch (i.e. brought to
p z=mv z
rest)?
How can you change an object’s
a) 0.50-kg ball moving at 4.0 m/s
momentum?
b) 0.10-kg ball moving at 20 m/s
- Greater momentum
Example 1: Teeing off
o Hard to change its state of
motion A golf ball of mass 50 g is struck with a club.
- Lesser momentum The force exerted by the club on the ball
o Easy to change its state of varies from zero, at the instant before
motion contact, up to some maximum value and
- To change momentum then back to zero when the ball travels 200
o Apply a force m, estimate the magnitude of the impulse
o Apply the force at a longer caused by the collision. (Assume a launch
period of time angle of 45°.)
Impulse-Momentum Theorem
⃗J = ⃗
F net ∆t=⃗p 2−⃗p 1
m 1 v 1 i+ m2 v 2 i=m 1 v 1 f +m 2 v 2 f
Two-dimensional collision
- For a general collision of two objects in
three-dimensional space, the
conservation of momentum principle
implies that the total momentum of the
system in each direction is conserved
Center of Mass If the net external force is zero
(P=constant),
What happens in the motion of an object
NOT treated as a point particle? - The center of mass itself follows the
same smooth path that we expect for a
- For a system composed of a pair of
smaller, simpler object, like a “point
particles that have different masses and
particle”.
connect by a light rigid rod.
- The sum of forces on the particles is
m 1 x 1 +m 2 x 2
x cm = ∑ F ext =M ⃗aCM
m1 +m 2
“The net external force on a system of
Example 7: CM of water molecule particles equals the total mass of the
system multiplied by the acceleration of
A water molecule consists of an oxygen
the center of mass.”
atom and two hydrogen atoms. Oxygen has
a mass of 16 unified mass units (u) and each
hydrogen has a mass of 1 u. The hydrogen
Example 9: Projectile Bomb
atoms are each at an average distance of
9.6 nm (9.6 x 10-9) from the oxygen atom, A projectile is fired into the air over level
and are separated from one another by an ground with an initial velocity of 24.5 m/s at
angle of 104.5°. Where is the center of mass 36.9° to the horizontal. At its highest point,
of the water molecule? it explodes into two fragments of equal
mass. One fragment falls straight down to
Motion of the Center Mass
the ground. Where does the other fragment
What happens to system of particles when land? (given: x1= 0.5R, xcm=R, x2=?)
the system moves?
Example 10: Row your boat
m 1 ⃗v 1+ m2 ⃗v 2 +m 3 ⃗v 3 +…
⃗v cm= You (mass 80 kg) and Bob (mass 120 kg) are
m 1 +m 2+ m3 + …
in a rowboat (mass 60 kg) on a calm lake.
- If we represent M as the sum of the You are at the center of the boat, rowing,
masses of the particles in the system and he is at the back, 2 m from the center.
M ⃗v CM =m1 ⃗v 1 +m 2 ⃗v 2 +m 3 ⃗v 3+ …= ⃗
P You get tired and stop rowing. Bob offers to
- Total momentum is equal to the total row, and after the boat comes to rest, you
mass times the velocity of the center of change places. How far does the boat
mass. move? (Neglect any horizontal force
- The motion of a system of particles can exerted by the water.)
be simplified by considering its center of
mass.
o The treatment is LIKE that for
a point particle!
PTOT =⃗p1+ ⃗p 2+ ⃗p 3+ …
⃗