10.6 Collisions of Extended Bodies in Two Dimensions
10.6 Collisions of Extended Bodies in Two Dimensions
- The bowling pins are sent flying and spinning when hit by a bowling ball.
- A lot of collisions involve inertia.
- Cars can spin on ice or a wet surface.
- Baseball pitchers put spin on the ball.
- A tennis player can put a lot of top spin on the tennis ball which causes it to dive down onto the court once it crosses the net.
- We are looking at what happens when objects collide.
- There is an unbalanced force at the nail.
- The lever arm is zero so this force doesn't exert any Torque.
- In the collision, the momentum is conserved.
- The collision is inelastic.
- The force at the nail may have a part in the direction of the disk's initial velocity.
- The pins spin violently when the bowling ball hits them.
- The surface is not elastic and the unbalanced force at the nail does not exert any Torque.
- The first question can be answered using the concept of angular momentum.
- We can solve for the difference between the two.
- The primed quantities are calculated relative to the pivot point.
- The disk just before it strikes the stick is the initial inertia of the stick-disk.
- Before and after the collision, the incoming disk's translational and rotational energy are the same.
- The first step is to enter the mass and speed of the disk.
- The final moment of inertia and the final angle of rotation can be found after the collision.
- The disk has a linear momentum before the collision.
- The sum of the disk's momentum and the center of mass of the stick is what is left after the collision.
- The stick's center of mass moves at half the speed of the disk because of the total linear momentum.
- The collision is inelastic, so the energy after the collision is less.
- The momentum after the collision is greater than before.
- The result can be understood if you consider how the nail affects the stick.
- When the disk strikes the nail, the stick pushes backwards on the nail.
- The nail's reaction is to push forward on the stick, in the same direction as the disk was initially moving, in order to increase the system's momentum.
- There are other implications of the above example.
- The force would be applied to the nail in the forward direction.
- When the stick is struck at the end farthest from the nail, a backward force is put on the nail, and when it is hit at the end nearest the nail, a forward force is put on the nail.
- There is no force on the nail when striking it at a certain point.
- The percussion point is an intermediate point.
- The handle is pulled away from your hand if you hit a ball with the end of your racquet.
- The handle is pushed into your palm if you hit a ball much farther down.
- If you hit the ball at the racquet's percussion point, little or no force is exerted on your hand, and there is less vibration, reducing chances of a tennis elbow.
- The same thing happens to a baseball bat.
- A disk hitting a stick is similar to a tennis ball hitting a racquet.
- Justify your answer.
- Whether motion is involved or not, energy is always scalar.