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Tóm tắt nội dung (trích từ tài liệu gốc): Phys101 Lectures 11, 12 Momentum and Collisions Key points: � Momentum and impulse � Condition for conservation of momentum and why � How to solve collision problems � Centre of mass Ref: 7-1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10. Page 1 Momentum is a vector: It's a quantity that represents the amount and direction of motion. It was once called "the quantity of motion". Now we know that kinetic energy is another quantity of motion. Newton's 2nd Law m dv dp F ma dt dt p F t J where J F t is called the impulse of force F . Impulse-momentum principle : The net impulse on an object is equal to the change in momentum

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                Phys101 Lectures 11, 12

                 Momentum and Collisions



Key points:

� Momentum and impulse

� Condition for conservation of momentum and why

� How to solve collision problems

� Centre of mass



Ref: 7-1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10.



                                                                                                                                                                                                Page 1

Momentum is a vector:



It's a quantity that represents the amount and direction of motion.



It was once called "the quantity of motion". Now we know that



kinetic energy is another quantity of motion.



Newton's 2nd Law             m  dv    dp

                  F    ma

                                dt dt





                     p  F t  J





where J  F t is called the impulse of force F .



Impulse-momentum principle : The net impulse on an object is



equal to the change in momentum of the object.





                         J  p





                     F t  p2  p1

Example: Force of a tennis serve.



For a top player, a tennis ball may leave the

racket on the serve with a speed of 55 m/s

(about 120 mi/h). If the ball has a mass of

0.060 kg and is in contact with the racket for

about 4 ms (4 x 10-3 s), estimate the average

force on the ball.



[Solution]



                  x

J  Favet  p



         p mv  0

Fave  t  t



 0.06  55

     0.004



 800 (N )

i-clicker question 11-1



A 0.140-kg baseball is dropped from rest. It has a speed of 1.20 m/s



just before it hits the ground. It rebounds with a speed of 1.00 m/s.



The ball is in contact with the ground for 0.00140 s. What is the



average force exerted by the ground on the ball during that time?



(ignore gravity).          



A) 20 N            F t  p                         x



B) 100 N           Fx t  px

C) 220 N

D) 240 N           Fx      px    m( v fx  vix  )

E) 120 N                   t          t



                        0.1401.00  ( 1.20 )



                                  0.0014



                        220 ( N )



                   Gravitational force: mg=0.14x9.8=1.37N.

Many-body System                                                       

                                                                       F12 2

Two students pulling each other on ice.                   1             

                                                                       F21

Internal forces:  F12and  F2    1  .            

External forces:



                  m1g , m2g , FN1 and FN1



Newton's law:                                ,                            

                  m1g    FN1    F12     dp1       m2 g    FN 2    F21    dp2

                                        dt                                dt



    Adding

the two equations                                           

                                      F12           dp1    dp2

m1g  FN1  m2 g  FN 2                         F21    dt     dt



                                        P is the total momentum of the system

                              dP

          Fext  Fint  dt .



 Since the internal forces always cancel, F21  F12 ,                     Fint  0



                  (only external forces can change the total momentum)

            dP

    Fext    dt                                                        Demo

Conservation of Momentum



 When                    i.e.,  

       Fext  0,  dP  0,         P  cons tan t

                 dt



This is the law of conservation of linear

momentum:



When the net external force on a system of objects is zero,

the total momentum of the system remains constant.



Note 1: If one of the components of the net external

force is zero, the corresponding component of the total

momentum of the system is conserved (even though the

total momentum vector may or may not be conserved).



Note 2: For a one-object system, the condition for

momentum conservation is that the net force acting on

the object is zero.

i-clicker question 11-2

The condition for momemtum to be conserved is

(A) It's a closed system.

(B) The net external force is zero.

(C) No nonconservative work.

(D) The momentum is never conserved.

(E) The momentum is always conserved.

Example: Rifle recoil.



Calculate the recoil

velocity of a 5.0-kg rifle

that shoots a 0.020-kg

bullet at a speed of 620

m/s.

[Solution]



X-component of external



Force is zero;



Thus the x-component of the total momentum is conserved:



Pxf  Pxi  0



mBvBx  mRvRx  0



vRx    mBvBx     0.02 620   2.5 ( m /  s)

           mR           5

Collisions



           Momentum is conserved in all

           collisions.

           Why?

           Because the impulse of external

           forces can be ignored (much

           smaller than internal impulse).



           Collisions in which kinetic energy

           is conserved as well are called

           elastic collisions, and those in

           which it is not are called inelastic.

Elastic Collisions in One Dimension



                            Here we have two objects

                            colliding elastically. We

                            know the masses and the

                            initial speeds.



                            Since both momentum

                            and kinetic energy are

                            conserved, we can write

                            two equations. This

                            allows us to solve for the

                            two unknown final

                            speeds.

                                 x



Example: Billiard ball A of mass m moving with speed vA collides

head-on with ball B of equal mass. What are the speeds of the two



balls after the collision, assuming it is elastic? Assume ball B is



initially at rest (vB = 0).      (1)2  (2) : 0  2vAvB

Conservation of momentum:



 mvA  mvA  mvB (x - comp)        Solution 1: vA  0

                                                 vB  vA

Conservation of kinetic energy:



1  mvA2      1  mvA2    1  mvB2    Solution 2 : vB  0

2            2          2                           vA  vA



   vA  vA  vB              (1)   Solution 2 should be rejected

                                 because it means no collision.

   v  2    vA2   vB2       (2)

      A

              Inelastic Collisions



With inelastic collisions, some of the initial

kinetic energy is lost to thermal or potential

energy. Kinetic energy may also be gained

during explosions, as there is the addition of

chemical or nuclear energy.



A completely inelastic collision is one in

which the objects stick together afterward,

so there is only one final velocity. vA  vB

Example: Railroad cars collide



A 10,000-kg railroad car, A, traveling at a speed of 24.0 m/s strikes an

identical car, B, at rest. If the cars lock together as a result of the

collision, what is their common speed immediately after the

collision?



Conservation of momentum (x-comp.):   mvA  mvA  mvB

Hit and stick (perfectly inelastic):

Solve:                                vA  vB



                                      vA    vB    vA

                                                  2

Example: Ballistic pendulum.



The ballistic pendulum is a device used to

measure the speed of a projectile, such as a

bullet. The projectile, of mass m, is fired into

a large block of mass M, which is

suspended like a pendulum. As a result of

the collision, the pendulum and projectile

together swing up to a maximum height h.

Determine the relationship between the

initial horizontal speed of the projectile, v,

and the maximum height h.



[Solution] Two events:



1. Hit and stick; mv  ( m  M )v



2. Swing .  1 ( m  M )v2  ( m  M )gh

            2



Eliminate v : 1 m2 v2  ( m  M )gh , v  m  M 2gh

2 mM                          m

       Collisions in Two or Three Dimensions



Example: Proton-proton collision.



A proton traveling with speed 8.2 x 105 m/s collides elastically with

a stationary proton in a hydrogen target. One of the protons is

observed to be scattered at a 60�angle. At what angle will the

second proton be observed, and what will be the velocities of the

two protons after the collision?



Elastic collision:                              mA  mB  m



1  mvA2        1  mvA2    1  mvB2                          A  60

2              2          2





i.e.,  v  2   vA2    vB2     (1)

          A



Conservation of momentum:                       vB ,  3 unknowns : vA , vB ,B .

          mvA       mvB                   vA

mvA                       ,  i.e.,  vA                3 equations : (1), (2), (3).

                                                      vA  4.1105 m / s

x : vA  vA cos A  vB cosB (2)                         vB  7.1105 m / s



y : 0  vA sin A  vB sinB (3)                          B  30.

i-clicker question 11-3



A car with a mass of 1200 kg and a speed of 12 m/s heading north

approaches am intersection. At the same time, a minivan with a

mass of 1300 kg and speed of 24 m/s heading east is also

approaching the intersection. The car and the minivan collide and

stick together. Consider the total momentum and the total kinetic

energy of the two vehicles before and after the collision.



HCWoitnhasaneBAtdri..vssattBecTithcionhooekenetn:hvrstgoeeotylfhrtovameicvseliCtodmtnoym.otoaoetmvlfncVmettohunonemtmsuvwe:mRerrnveitescupdkcmC.eodannvspeedVhrtviocetldaPelRsbkujiuntsetthtiaecftteoenrtaetlrhygke(yiNncae)ortleilcision?



       C. Neither the total momentum nor the total kinetic energy is



        TcmohVnevsVteort2vael dkmi.nCevtiCc  2  34400 ( kg  m / s

    PR                                                             )                                   the  total       x (E)

                                             energy is conserved

    D.                                                             but



vR  E.mVmTkPihnoReemmtciCehcnaetnun1gme3er0gi3is0ny4.n4too01tt02ac0lom0nosme1re3vn.e7tdu(.mme/qsu)als  the  change  

                                                                                                                    ipnV total



      tan1 pV  tan1 mV vV  65                                                                               pC      

                                                                                                                    PR

        pC                                   mC vC

               Center of Mass (CM)



The general motion of an object can be considered as the

sum of the translational motion of the CM, plus rotational,

vibrational, or other forms of motion about the CM.



The centre of mass is practically the same as the centre of

gravity because the gravitational force goes through the

CM. Also, the gravitational potential energy should be

measured at the CM.

                   Center of Mass (CM)



For two particles, the center of mass lies closer to the one with the

most mass:



where M is the total mass.



For example, if xA=1m, xB=2m, mA=10kg, mB=10kg; then xCM=1.5m.

For example, if xA=1m, xB=2m, mA=10kg, mB=40kg; then xCM=1.8m.

For example, if xA=1m, xB=2m, mA=40kg, mB=10kg; then xCM=1.2m.



In general,  xCM    mAxA   mB xB  ,  yCM    mA yA   mB yB  ,

                      mA   mB                  mA   mB

Exercise: Three particles in 2-D.



Three particles, each of mass

2.50 kg, are located at the

corners of a right triangle

whose sides are 2.00 m and 1.50

m long, as shown. Locate the

center of mass.



[Solution]



xCM    mA xA  mB xB  mC xC                 yCM    mA yA  mB yB  mC yC

           mA  mB  mC                                 mA  mB  mC



       1  xA    xB    xC    (mA  mB  mC )         1  yA    yB    yC  

       3                                          3



      1 0  2.0  2.0                              1 0  0 1.5



       3                                          3



      1.33 ( m )                                 0.50 ( m )

Example: CM of L-shaped flat object.



Determine the CM of the uniform thin L-shaped object shown.



[Solution] The object consists of two

rectangular parts: A and B, whose

centres of mass are (xA, yA) and (xB, yB).



   xA  1.03m, yA  0.10m   t  thickness )

   xB  1.96m, yB  0.74m



mA  t( 2.06 0.20 )

     0.412t (  density ,



mB  t(1.480.20 )  0.296t



xCM    mAxA  mB xB      0.4121.03  0.2961.96   1.42 ( m )

         mA  mB                0.412  0.296



yCM    mA yA   mB yB    0.412 0.10  0.296( 0.74 )   0.25 ( m )

          mA   mB                0.412  0.296

Center of Mass and Translational Motion



The total momentum of a system of particles is equal to the product



of the total mass and the velocity of the center of mass.





PTotal  MvC



The sum of all the forces acting on a system is equal to the total

mass of the system multiplied by the acceleration of the center of

mass:



Therefore, the center of mass of a system of particles

(or objects) with total mass M moves like a single

particle of mass M acted upon by the same net

external force.

Conceptual Example: A two-stage rocket.



A rocket is shot into the air as shown. At the moment it

reaches its highest point, a horizontal distance d from its

starting point, a prearranged explosion separates it into

two parts of equal mass. Part I is stopped in midair by the

explosion and falls vertically to Earth. Where does part II

land? Assume g = constant.