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Reading Quiz - Momentum

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Reading Quiz - Momentum 1. Which is true? Conservation of the total momentum of a system ___ 1. holds only when mechanical energy is conserved. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Reading Quiz - Momentum


1
Reading Quiz - Momentum
  • 1. Which is true? Conservation of the total
    momentum of a system
  • ___ 1. holds only when mechanical energy is
    conserved.
  • ___ 2. holds for any system.
  • ___ 3. follows from Newtons second law.
  • ___ 4. is equivalent to Newtons third law.

2
  • 2. A rocket is propelled forward by ejecting gas
    at high speed. The forward motion is a
    consequence of
  • ___ 1. conservation of energy.
  • ___ 2. conservation of momentum.
  • ___ 3. both of the above.
  • ___ 4. neither of the above.

3
  • 3. The impulse delivered to a body by a force is
  • ___ 1. defined only for interactions of short
    duration.
  • ___ 2. equal to the change in momentum of the
    body.
  • ___ 3. equal to the area under an F vs. x graph.
  • ___ 4. defined only for elastic collisions.

4
  • 4. In an elastic collision
  • ___ 1. energy is conserved.
  • ___ 2. momentum is conserved.
  • ___ 3. the magnitude of the relative velocity is
    conserved.
  • ___ 4. all of the above

5
Linear Momentum
  • The linear momentum p of an object of mass m
    moving with velocity v is defined as
  • Note vector nature!
  • Newtons 2nd law can be re-expressed as

6
Impulse
  • Many forces are variable and act for a short
    period of time (as in collisions). A useful
    quantity is the impulse I of such a force
  • Equivalent average force of the impulsive force

7
Conceptual Questions
  • 1) Momentum is most closely related to
  • ____ a) kinetic energy
  • ____ b) potential energy
  • ____ c) impulse
  • ____ d) power
  • ____ e) none of the above

8
  • 2) An object that has momentum must also have
  • ____ a) acceleration
  • ____ b) impulse
  • ____ c) kinetic energy
  • ____ d) potential energy

9
  • 3) Two equal-mass bullets traveling with the same
    speed strike a target. One of the bullets is
    rubber and bounces off, the other is metal and
    penetrates, coming to rest in the target. Which
    exerts the greater impulse on the target?
  • ____ a) the rubber bullet
  • ____ b) the metal bullet
  • ____ c) both exert the same
  • ____ d) not enough information
  • ____ e) none of these

10
Quantitative Questions
  • 1) What effect on its momentum does doubling the
    kinetic energy of a moving object have?
  • 2) The head of a golf club is in contact with a
    46 gram golf ball for 0.50 milliseconds, and as a
    result, the ball flies off at 70 m/s. Find the
    average force that was acting on the ball during
    the impact.

11
Conservation of Linear Momentum
  • The total momentum of a system composed of many
    particles is simply the vector sum of the
    individual momentum of each particle.
  • An isolated system is one in which the only
    forces present are those between the objects of
    the system.
  • It follows from Newtons 3rd law that the total
    momentum of an isolated system of bodies remains
    constant.

12
Quantitative Problems
  • 1) A 13 gram bullet traveling 230 m/s penetrates
    a 2.0 kg block of wood and emerges going 170 m/s.
    If the block is stationary on a frictionless
    surface when hit, how fast does it move after the
    bullet emerges?
  • 2) A spacecraft moving at 10 km/s breaks apart
    into 2 pieces of equal mass, one of which moves
    off at 4 km/s in a direction opposite to the
    original direction. Find the speed and direction
    of the other piece.

13
  • 3) An astronaut outside an orbiting space craft
    uses a pistol that ejects a gas in order to
    maneuver in space. Suppose the astronaut in her
    space suit have a total mass of 100 kg and the
    pistol ejects 12 gm of gas per second at a speed
    of 650 m/s. How long should the astronaut operate
    the pistol in order to have a speed of 1 m/s?

14
Collisions
  • Important Momentum is always conserved in all
    collisions! Not energy or kinetic energy!!
  • Elastic collision - one where total kinetic
    energy is conserved.
  • Inelastic collision - one where total kinetic
    energy is not conserved.
  • Completely inelastic collision - one in which the
    colliding bodies stick together after the
    collision.

15
Conceptual Question
  • 1) In an elastic collision
  • ____ a) momentum is conserved but not KE
  • ____ b) KE is conserved but not momentum
  • ____ c) momentum and KE are both conserved
  • ____ d) neither momentum nor KE is conserved

16
Quantitative Problems
  • 1) A pair of bumper cars collide elastically as
    one approaches the other directly from the rear.
    One has a mass of 450 kg and the other 550 kg. If
    the lighter one approaches at 4.5 m/s and other
    is moving at 3.7 m/s, calculate (a) their
    velocities after the collision, and (b) the
    change in momentum of each.

17
  • 2) A 30 kg girl who is running at 3 m/s jumps on
    a stationary 10 kg sled on a frozen lake. How
    fast does the sled then move?
  • 3) Two people, one of mass 75 kg and the other of
    mass 60 kg, sit in a rowboat of mass 80 kg. With
    the boat initially at rest, the two people, who
    have been sitting at opposite ends of the boat
    2.0 m apart from each other, now exchange seats.
    How far and in what direction will the boat move?
  • (Hint it can be shown that the net force acting
    on a system of particles equals the total mass
    times the acceleration of the center of mass
    )

18
Collisions in Higher Dimensions
  • When a collision between 2 objects is not head on
    (called a glancing collision), the collision
    becomes 2- or 3-dimensional.
  • Since momentum is a vector quantity, for these
    glancing collisions, each component of momentum
    must be individually conserved

19
  • If collisions are also elastic, then the total
    kinetic energy is also conserved

20
Conceptual Problem
  • Two identical balls moving with the same speed
    towards each other along the x-axis suffer a
    glancing collision. After the collision,
  • ____ a) they bounce back and move along the x-
    axis.
  • ____ b) they must necessarily stick together and
    stop moving.
  • ____ c) they can move off in any direction but
    must have equal and opposite velocities.
  • ____ d) not enough information is given.

21
Quantitative Problems
  • 1) Two shuffleboard disks of equal mass, one
    orange and the other yellow, are involved in a
    perfectly elastic glancing collision. The yellow
    disk is initially at rest and is struck by the
    orange disk moving with a speed of 5 m/s. After
    the collision, the orange disk moves along a
    direction that makes an angle of 37? with its
    initial direction of motion and the velocity of
    the yellow disk is perpendicular to that of the
    orange disk (after the collision. Determine the
    final speed of each disk.

22
  • 2) After a completely inelastic collision, two
    objects of the same mass and same initial speed
    are found to move away together at half their
    initial speed. Find the angle between the initial
    velocities of the objects.
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