8.6 Collisions of Point Masses in Two Dimensions

8.6 Collisions of Point Masses in Two Dimensions

  • Cart 1 carries a spring.
    • During the collision, the spring releases its potential energy and converts it to internal energy.
    • The cart and the spring have an initial velocity of.
    • Cart 2 has a mass of 0.500 kg and an initial velocity of.
  • The force of the spring is internal and we can use it to find the final velocity of cart 2.
    • We can compare the internal energy before and after the collision to see how much energy was released by the spring.
  • The final velocity of cart 2 is large and positive, meaning that it is moving to the right after the collision.
    • The internal energy in this collision increases.
    • The energy was released by the spring.
  • The incoming and outgoing velocities are all along the same line when there is a one-dimensional collision.
    • We will see that their study is an extension of the one-dimensional analysis already presented.
  • A pair of one-dimensional problems can be solved at the same time.
  • The objects might move before or after a collision.
    • Two ice skaters will spin in circles if they hook arms as they pass each other.
    • We arrange things so that no rotation is possible until later.
    • That is structureless particles that can't spin.
  • We start by assuming that.
    • One of the particles is at rest in the simplest collision.
    • With the chosen coordinate system, the components of momentum along the and -axes are initially zero, but they will also be conserved.
    • The facts simplify the analysis.
  • A two-dimensional collision with the coordinate system chosen so that it is at rest and parallel to the - axis.
    • The laboratory coordinate system is sometimes called the laboratory coordinate system because many scattering experiments have a target that is stationary in the laboratory, while particles are scattered from it to determine the particles that make-up the target and how they are bound together.
    • The particles may not be observed directly, but their initial and final velocities are.
  • The situation after the collision is indicated by the subscripts and primes.
  • The velocities along the - axis have the form.
    • Particle 1 moves along the - axis.
  • Particle 1 moves along the - axis.
    • Particle 2 is at rest.
  • The velocities along the - axis have the form.
  • In analyzing two-dimensional collisions of particles, the equations of momentum along the - axis and - axis are very useful.
    • Two equations can only be used to find two unknowns, and so other data is needed when collision experiments are used to explore nature at the subatomic level.
  • The following experiment can be performed.
    • An object is slid on a surface into a dark room, where it strikes a stationary object with a mass of 0.400 kilogram.
    • The object emerges from the room at an angle.
  • The surface is not slippery.
  • The quantities that we wish to find are not known in the equations.
    • We have two equations that are independent and can be used to find unknowns.
  • This angle indicates that it is scattered to the right in Figure 8.12, as expected, because the angles are positive in the counter clockwise direction.
    • The equation for the - or - axis can be used to solve the problem, but the one with fewer terms is the easiest.
  • Before and after the collision, it is important to calculate the internal energy of the system.
    • The collision is inelastic if you do this calculation, because the internal energy is less after the collision.
    • A physicist wants to explore the system further.
  • A stationary object scatters the incoming object.
    • The stationary object's mass is not known.
    • It is possible to calculate the magnitude and direction of the initially stationary object's velocity after the collision by measuring the angle and speed at which the room emerges.
  • There are some interesting situations that arise when two objects collide.
    • This situation is similar to when billiard balls collide and when particles collide.
    • We can get a mental image of a collision of particles by thinking about billiards.
    • An elastic collision conserves energy.
    • Let us assume that object 2 is at rest.