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18 problems tagged with Collision in Momentum

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Mechanics › Momentum

P0570

Beginner Mechanics › Momentum

Ball Colliding with a Spring-Loaded Block

As shown in the figure, a steel ball of mass $m$ is shot horizontally with velocity $v$ into the barrel of a spring gun of mass $M$, which is initially at rest on a smooth horizontal surface. The friction between the spring and the barrel is negligible.

  1. When the ball causes the spring to reach maximum compression, what is the elastic potential energy of the spring?
  2. What fraction is this potential energy of the ball's initial kinetic energy?
Collision

P0571

Beginner Mechanics › Momentum

Equal Mass Head-on Collision Analysis

Two small balls of equal mass move towards each other at the same speed. After a head-on collision, they both move in the opposite direction at their original speeds.

Is this collision elastic? Why?
Collision

P0572

Beginner Mechanics › Momentum

One-Dimensional Collision of Two Objects

Two objects, A and B, move in the same direction on the same straight line, with A in front. Object A has a mass of $m_A = 2$ kg and a speed of $v_A = 1$ m/s. Object B has a mass of $m_B = 4$ kg and a speed of $v_B = 3$ m/s. After B catches up to A for a head-on collision, both objects continue in the original direction. The speed of A becomes $v_A' = 3$ m/s, and the speed of B becomes $v_B' = 2$ m/s.

Is this collision elastic? Why?
Collision

P0573

Beginner Mechanics › Momentum

Velocity Change in Two-Body Collisions

Consider a collision between two objects with masses $m_1$ and $m_2$. Their velocity changes are defined as $\Delta v_1 = v_1' - v_1$ and $\Delta v_2 = v_2' - v_2$, where $v$ and $v'$ are the velocities before and after the collision, respectively.

  1. Prove that the ratio of their velocity changes is inversely proportional to the ratio of their masses: $\Delta v_1 / \Delta v_2 = -m_2 / m_1$.
  2. Using this result, discuss the characteristics of the velocity changes when a very light object collides with a very heavy object.
Collision

P0574

Beginner Mechanics › Momentum

Proton-Nitrogen Nucleus Collision

A proton (mass $m_p = 1.67 \times 10^{-27}$ kg) moving at $v_p = 1.0 \times 10^7$ m/s collides with a nitrogen nucleus initially at rest ($v_N = 0$). After the collision, the proton rebounds at $v_p' = -6.0 \times 10^6$ m/s, and the nitrogen nucleus moves forward at $v_N' = 4.0 \times 10^6$ m/s. The velocities are along a straight line.

  1. What is the mass of the nitrogen nucleus?
  2. Can you find the interaction force during their collision? Why?
Collision

P0584

Beginner Mechanics › Momentum

One-Dimensional Elastic Collision

An object with mass $m_1=2.0$ kg undergoes a one-dimensional elastic collision with a stationary object of mass $m_2$. After the collision, the first object continues to move in its original direction with a speed equal to one-fourth of its initial speed.

Find the mass of the second object, $m_2$.
Collision

P0585

Beginner Mechanics › Momentum

Ballistic Pendulum with Spring

As shown in Figure, a bullet with mass $m = 50$ g is fired into a wooden block of mass $M=500$ g. The block is attached to a spring with spring constant $k=1000$ N/m. The bullet embeds itself in the block, and the combination compresses the spring by a maximum distance of $x=50$ cm. The horizontal surface is frictionless.

Find the initial speed of the bullet.
Collision

P0586

Beginner Mechanics › Momentum

Coal Car with Variable Mass

A coal car moves at a constant speed of $v=3$ m/s under a hopper. Coal is dropped vertically into the car at a rate of $\lambda=500$ kg/s. Ignore friction.

  1. What traction force is required to keep the car's speed constant?
  2. How much work is done by this force in one second?
  3. How much kinetic energy does the coal added in one second gain?
  4. Are the work done and the kinetic energy gained equal?
Collision

P0587

Intermediate Mechanics › Momentum

Two-Dimensional Collision of Equal Mass Balls

There are two small balls, A and B, of equal mass. Ball A collides with ball B, which is initially at rest on a smooth horizontal table. The initial velocity of ball A is $v_1 = 30$ m/s to the right. After the collision, ball A moves in a direction at an angle $\alpha = 30^\circ$ with its original direction of motion. Ball B's velocity makes an angle $\beta = 45^\circ$ with the original direction of motion of ball A.

Find the speeds of ball A ($v'_1$) and ball B ($v'_2$) after the collision.
Conservation of Momentum Collision

P0589

Intermediate Mechanics › Momentum

Inelastic Collision and Energy Loss

Two balls move towards each other, each with a speed of 2 m/s. One ball's mass is 3 times the other's. They stick together after colliding.

  1. What is their common final velocity?
  2. What percentage of the system's initial mechanical energy is lost?
Conservation of Momentum Collision

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