Physics 207: Lecture 2 Notes
Download
Report
Transcript Physics 207: Lecture 2 Notes
Lecture 13
Goals:
• Chapter 9
•
Employ conservation of momentum in 1 D & 2D
Examine forces over time (aka Impulse)
Chapter 10
Understand the relationship between motion and energy
Assignments:
HW5, due tomorrow
For Wednesday, Read all of Chapter 10
Physics 207: Lecture 13, Pg 1
Momentum is conserved if no external force
pbefore pafter
Physics 207: Lecture 13, Pg 2
Inelastic collision in 1-D: Example
A block of mass M is initially at rest on a frictionless horizontal
surface. A bullet of mass m is fired at the block with a muzzle
velocity (speed) v. The bullet lodges in the block, and the
block ends up with a final speed V.
In terms of m, M, and V :
What is the momentum of the bullet with speed v ?
x
v
V
before
after
Physics 207: Lecture 13, Pg 3
Inelastic collision in 1-D: Example
What is the momentum of the bullet with speed v ?
m
v
Key question: Is there a net external x-dir force ?
If not, then momentum in the x-direction is conserved!
P After
P Before
mv M 0 (m M )V
aaaa
v
V
after
x
before
v (1 M / m)V
Physics 207: Lecture 13, Pg 4
Momentum is a vector
p mv p x iˆ p y ˆj p z kˆ
p x mv x
p y mv y
p z mv z
Physics 207: Lecture 13, Pg 5
A perfectly inelastic collision in 2-D
Consider a collision in 2-D (cars crashing at a
slippery intersection...no friction).
V
v1
q
m1 + m2
m1
m2
v2
before
after
If no external force momentum is conserved.
Momentum is a vector so px, py and pz
Physics 207: Lecture 13, Pg 6
A perfectly inelastic collision in 2-D
p
p1
V
v1
q
m1 + m2
m1
m2
v2
p
2
before
after
x-dir px : m1 v1 = (m1 + m2 ) V cos q
y-dir py : m2 v2 = (m1 + m2 ) V sin q
Physics 207: Lecture 13, Pg 7
Exercise
Momentum is a Vector (!) quantity
A.
B.
C.
D.
A block slides down a frictionless ramp and then falls and
lands in a cart which then rolls horizontally without friction
In regards to the block landing in the cart is momentum
conserved?
Yes
No
Yes & No
Too little information given
Physics 207: Lecture 13, Pg 8
Elastic Collisions
Elastic means that the objects do not stick.
There are many more possible outcomes but, if no external
force, then momentum will always be conserved
Start with a 1-D problem.
Before
After
Physics 207: Lecture 13, Pg 12
Billiards
Consider the case where one ball is initially at rest.
after
before
pa q
pb
Pa f
F
The final direction of the red ball will
depend on where the balls hit.
Physics 207: Lecture 13, Pg 13
Billiards: Without external forces, conservation
of momentum (and energy Ch. 10 & 11)
Conservation of Momentum
x-dir Px : m vbefore = m vafter cos q + m Vafter cos f
y-dir Py :
0
= m vafter sin q + m Vafter sin f
after
before
pafter q
pb
F
Pafter f
Physics 207: Lecture 13, Pg 14
Explosions: A collision in reverse
A two piece assembly is hanging
vertically at rest at the end of a 2.0 m
long massless string. The mass of the
two pieces are 60 and 20 kg respectively.
Suddenly you observe that the 20 kg is
ejected horizontally at 30 m/s. The time
of the “explosion” is short compared to
the swing of the string.
Does the tension in the string increase or
decrease after the explosion?
Before
After
Physics 207: Lecture 13, Pg 17
Explosions: A collision in reverse
A two piece assembly is hanging
vertically at rest at the end of a 2.0 m
long massless string. The mass of the
two pieces are 60 and 20 kg respectively.
Suddenly you observe that the 10 kg is
ejected horizontally at 30 m/s.
Decipher the physics:
1. The green ball recoils in the –x
direction (3rd Law) and, because there is
no net force in the x-direction the xmomentum is conserved.
2. The motion of the green ball is
Before
constrained to a circular path…there
must be centripetal (i.e., radial
acceleration)
After
Physics 207: Lecture 13, Pg 18
Explosions: A collision in reverse
A two piece assembly is hanging vertically at
rest at the end of a 20.0 m long massless string.
The mass of the two pieces are 60 & 20 kg
respectively. Suddenly you observe that the 20
kg mass is suddenly ejected horizontally at 30
m/s.
Cons. of x-momentum
Px before= Px after = 0 = - M V + m v
V = m v / M = 20*30/ 60 = 10 m/s
Tbefore = Weight = (60+20) x 10 N = 800 N
Before
After
SFy = m ay (radial) = M V2/r = T – Mg
T = Mg + MV2 /r = 600 N + 60x(10)2/20 N = 900 N
Physics 207: Lecture 13, Pg 19
Impulse
(A variable force applied for a given time)
Gravity: At small displacements a “constant” force
Springs often provide a linear force (-k x) towards
its equilibrium position (Chapter 10)
Collisions often involve a varying force
F(t): 0 maximum 0
We can plot force vs time for a typical collision. The
impulse, J, of the force is a vector defined as the
integral of the force during the time of the collision.
Physics 207: Lecture 13, Pg 20
Force and Impulse
(A variable force applied for a given time)
J a vector that reflects momentum transfer
t
t
p
J F dt (dp / dt )dt dp
F
Impulse J = area under this curve !
(Transfer of momentum !)
t
t
Impulse has units of Newton-seconds
ti
tf
Physics 207: Lecture 13, Pg 21
Force and Impulse
Two different collisions can have the same impulse since
J depends only on the momentum transfer, NOT the
nature of the collision.
F
same area
F
t
t big, F small
t
t
t
t small, F big
Physics 207: Lecture 13, Pg 22
Average Force and Impulse
F
Fav
F
Fav
t
t big, Fav small
t
t
t
t small, Fav big
Physics 207: Lecture 13, Pg 23
Exercise
Force & Impulse
Two boxes, one heavier than the other, are initially at rest on
a horizontal frictionless surface. The same constant force F
acts on each one for exactly 1 second.
Which box has the most momentum after the force acts ?
F
A.
B.
C.
D.
light
F
heavy
heavier
lighter
same
can’t tell
Physics 207: Lecture 13, Pg 24
Boxing: Use Momentum and Impulse to estimate g “force”
Physics 207: Lecture 13, Pg 25
Back of the envelope calculation
t
J F dt Favg t
(1) marm~ 7 kg
(2) varm~7 m/s (3) Impact time t ~ 0.01 s
Question: Are these reasonable?
Impulse J = p ~ marm varm ~ 49 kg m/s
Favg ~ J/t ~ 4900 N
(1) mhead ~ 7 kg
ahead = F / mhead ~ 700 m/s2 ~ 70 g !
Enough to cause unconsciousness ~ 40% of a fatal blow
Only a rough estimate!
Physics 207: Lecture 13, Pg 26
Ch. 10 : Kinetic & Potential energies
Kinetic energy, K = ½ mv2, is defined to be the
large scale collective motion of one or a set of
masses
Potential energy, U, is defined to be the “hidden”
energy in an object which, in principle, can be
converted back to kinetic energy
Mechanical energy, EMech, is defined to be the sum
of U and K.
Physics 207: Lecture 13, Pg 28
Lecture 13
Assignment:
HW6 up soon
For Wednesday: Read all of chapter 10
Physics 207: Lecture 13, Pg 29