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Momentum

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Railroad trains. Jumbo jets. Events with lots of impulse. Baseball hitting bat ... Q 6.22 Railroad car A rolls at a certain speed and makes a perfectly elastic ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Momentum


1
Momentum
  • Physics 1010
  • Dr. Don Franceschetti
  • February 10, 2006

2
Guide questions
  • Isnt there an easier way to solve physics
    problems than by using Newtons laws?
  • Why do football players wear so much padding?
  • How do real CSIs determine what happened in a
    crash when there are no survivors?
  • How do you measure the speed of a speeding
    bullet?
  • How do particle physicists study collisions of
    particles that they cant see?

3
Feynmanns Chess Game Analogy
  • Studying nature is like watching a complex game
    being played at high speed and trying to figure
    out the rules from what we see.

4
Chess analogy, contd
  • You look for simple plays where only a few
    pieces are involved
  • You notice some constanciessome things are
    conserved
  • You eventually get an idea of an overall strategy
  • You are allowed to rearrange the game board a
    little bit

5
Dynamical View
  • Newtons three laws and the various force laws
    come from observing and experimenting with simple
    situations.

6
Conservation View
  • Certain quantities are conserved
  • Momentum
  • Energy
  • Angular momentum.
  • Knowing these conservation laws lets us solve a
    lot of problems, especially when we dont know
    the detailed nature of the forces

7
Strategy View in Mechanics(Geniuses Only)
  • For any process that begins with particles at
    given position at time t1 and ends with them at
    given positions at time t2,nature selects paths
    for the particles such that a certain quantity
    called the action is minimum for the path
    actually taken. (Principle of Least Action)
  • This is weird but nonetheless true. It can be
    shown equivalent to Newtons laws.

8
Momentum
  • The momentum of an object is the product of its
    mass and velocity.
  • Pmv
  • Because velocity is a vector, momentum is a
    vector.
  • Newtons first law tells us that if the net force
    on an object is zero, the momentum does not
    change
  • Momentum has units of kg m / s

9
Net force produces momentum change
  • If a constant force acts for time interval t.
  • Ft mat m Dv D (mv)
  • Ft is called the impulse delivered by the net
    force.
  • The units of impulse are Ns which are the same
    as kg m / s
  • For a force which varies in time we can
    calculate the impulse it delivers using calculus,
    or from D (mv).

10
Objects with lots of momentum
  • Planets and moons
  • Asteroids (usually)
  • Supertankers
  • Railroad trains
  • Jumbo jets

11
Events with lots of impulse
  • Baseball hitting bat
  • Golf club hitting ball
  • Boxer hitting boxer
  • Ball bouncing from
  • floor/wall
  • Bullet hitting target
  • Billiard ball collision
  • Car collisions
  • Elementary particle collisions

12
For the same momentum change
  • You can reduce the force experienced by
    lengthening the time of contact. So,
  • Baseball catchers wear front padding
  • Football players wear shoulder pads
  • Manic patients get padded cells
  • Boxers wear padded gloves
  • You should roll with the punches
  • But if you want to maximize force, keep the time
    short--karate

13
Law of Momentum Conservation
  • The momentum of a system is the sum of the
    momenta of the objects that make it up.
  • In the absence of external forces, the momentum
    of any system is conserved.
  • For a system of one object, this is Newtons
    first law
  • For a system of more than one object, this
    follows from Newtons third law

14
Collisions
  • Are interactions in which very strong forces act
    for very short times.
  • Generally, we can ignore external forces for the
    duration of the collision.
  • Momentum is conserved in collisions.
  • Explosions and sticking are examples of
    collisions in which the number of objects
    changes.

15
Collisions can be
  • Elastic no lasting deformation of any object or
    heat produced
  • Inelastic some lasting deformation or heat
    produced
  • Completely inelastic objects stick together

16
Review
  • Q6.1 Which has the greater momentum, a heavy
    truck at rest or a moving skateboard?
  • Q6.4 Is the impulse momentum relationship
    related to Newtons third law?

17
Review
  • Q 6.22 Railroad car A rolls at a certain speed
    and makes a perfectly elastic collision with car
    B of the same mass. After the collision, car A
    is observed to be at rest. How does the speed of
    car A compare with the speed of car B?

18
Review
  • E 6.3. In terms of impulse and momentum, why do
    air bags in cars reduce the chances of injury in
    accidents.
  • E 6.14 If a ball is projected upward with 10 kg
    m/s of momentum, what is the momentum of recoil
    of the world? Why do we not feel this?

19
Review
  • P 6.1 What is the impulse needed to stop a 10-kg
    bowling ball moving at 6 m/s?
  • Q 5.8 To produce a net force on a system, must
    there be an externally applied force?

20
Review
  • E 5.6 When you drop a rubber ball on the floor it
    bounces almost to the original height. What
    causes the ball to bounce?
  • E 5.13 Why does a rope climber pull downward on
    the rope to move upward?
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