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Your comments: I really like how we have to explain our answers because on the checkpoint questions, I always think I have the right answer, but when I explain how I got to that answer, I realize that my answer is wrong. Give me food, and I will live; give me water, and I will die. What am I? I felt pretty confident with this material. I'm panicking. I'm seriously panicking. What am I going to do. Good pre-lecture, and I felt that it was easy to understand. Question: Why did you go into physics? OH MY GOD! I understood this! It's a MIRACLE! This was a very confusing prelecture. This was a pretty easy topic, but I have one request. Please, never ever play those cartoons for us in class ever again. Too painful to listen to..... I'm a little lost on the reference frames. Could you explain the difference and maybe some examples? I think all of this makes sense. But I am somewhat worried about rotation...never understood that in high school... Could we possibly do a Harlem Shake: the physics 211 version? I hope we're doing a demo of the two balls On Friday, I'll have the unofficial impulse to elastically collide with the floor. This is a haiku/ It is meaningless to you/ So do not read it. I was more scared when he said that rotation is coming up next than with this material. I think I get this stuff, but I know rotation kicked my fanny in high school If "astro" means space and "naut" means none, then does "astronaut" mean no space? Mechanics Lecture 13, Slide 1 Physics 211 Lecture 13 Today’s Concepts: a) More on Elastic Collisions b) Average Force during Collisions Mechanics Lecture 13, Slide 2 I did not understand the concept at the end where one component of the kinetic energy of a system depended on the reference frame of the observer and the other did not. Isn't kinetic energy (or any energy for that matter) intrinsic? Mechanics Lecture 13, Slide 3 More on Elastic Collisions In CM frame, the speed of an object before an elastic collision is the same as the speed of the object after. v*1,i v*1, f v*2,i v*2, f |v*1,i - v*2,i| = |-v*1, f + v*2, f | = |-(v*1, f - v*2, f)| = |v*1, f - v*2, f | So the magnitude of the difference of the two velocities is the same before and after the collision. But the difference of two vectors is the same in any reference frame. Just Remember This Rate of approach before an elastic collision is the same as the rate of separation afterward, in any reference frame! Mechanics Lecture 13, Slide 4 Clicker Question Consider the two elastic collisions shown below. In 1, a golf ball moving with speed V hits a stationary bowling ball head on. In 2, a bowling ball moving with the same speed V hits a stationary golf ball. In which case does the golf ball have the greater speed after the collision? A) 1 B) 2 V 1 C) same V 2 Mechanics Lecture 13, Slide 5 Clicker Question A small ball is placed above a much bigger ball, and both are dropped together from a height H above the floor. Assume all collisions are elastic. What height do the balls bounce back to? H Before A After B C Mechanics Lecture 13, Slide 6 Explanation For an elastic collision, the rate of approach before is the same as the rate of separation afterward: v v video 3v m m v M v v M v Rate of approach = 2V Rate of separation = 2V Mechanics Lecture 13, Slide 7 CheckPoint A block slides to the right with speed V on a frictionless floor and collides with a bigger block which is initially at rest. After the collision the speed of both blocks is V/3 in opposite directions. Is the collision elastic? A) Yes B) No A) the velocities are equal so it is elastic B) rate of approach doesn not equal rate of seperation V Before Collision V/3 V/3 After Collision Mechanics Lecture 13, Slide 8 Forces during Collisions Ftot = Fto t = m a dP t2 Ftot dt = P (t 2 ) - P (t1 ) Ftot dt = d P dt t1 F ave t P F P = F ave t Fave t2 t t ti tf Ftot dt Fave t t1 Impulse Mechanics Lecture 13, Slide 9 Clicker Question P = F ave t Two blocks, B having twice the mass of A, are initially at rest on frictionless air tracks. You now apply the same constant force to both blocks for exactly one second. F air track A F air track B The change in momentum of block B is: A) Twice the change in momentum of block A B) The same as the change in momentum of block A C) Half the change in momentum of block A Mechanics Lecture 13, Slide 10 Clicker Question P = F ave t Two boxes, one having twice the mass of the other, are initially at rest on a horizontal frictionless surface. A force F acts on the lighter box and a force 2F acts on the heavier box. Both forces act for exactly one second. Which box ends up with the biggest momentum? A) Bigger box F B) Smaller box C) same 2F M 2M Mechanics Lecture 13, Slide 11 Clicker Question P = F ave t Two boxes, one having twice the mass of the other, are initially at rest on a horizontal frictionless surface. A force F acts on the lighter box and a force 2F acts on the heavier box. Both forces act for exactly one second. Which box ends up with the biggest speed? A) Bigger box F B) Smaller box C) same 2F M 2M Mechanics Lecture 13, Slide 12 Clicker Question P = F ave t Two boxes, one having twice the mass of the other, are initially at rest on a horizontal frictionless surface. A force F acts on both boxes over exactly the same distance, d. Which box ends up with the biggest kinetic energy? A) Bigger box F B) Smaller box C) same F M 2M Mechanics Lecture 13, Slide 13 CheckPoint A constant force acts for a time t on a block that is initially at rest on a frictionless surface, resulting in a final velocity V. Suppose the experiment is repeated on a block with twice the mass using a force that’s half as big. For how long would the force have to act to result in the same final velocity? F A) Four times as long. B) Twice as long. C) The same length. D) Half as long. E) A quarter as long. Lets try it again ! Mechanics Lecture 13, Slide 14 The experiment is repeated on a block with twice the mass using a force that’s half as big. For how long would the force have to act to result in the same final velocity? F A) Four times as long. B) Twice as long. C) The same length. A) The momentum of the big block will be twice that of the smaller. With the same force this would require twice as much time, but with half the force you now need four times as much time to have the same final velocity. B) Since we are using half the force, we need to apply it for twice the amount of time.. C) Ft=mv, the 2 and the one half cancel Mechanics Lecture 13, Slide 15 CheckPoint Identical balls are dropped from the same initial height and bounce back to half the initial height. In Case 1 the ball bounces off a cement floor and in Case 2 the ball bounces off a piece of stretchy rubber. In which case is the average force acting on the ball during the collision the biggest? A) Case 1 B) Case 2 Egg Demo Case 1 Case 2 Mechanics Lecture 13, Slide 16 CheckPoint Responses In which case is the average force acting on the ball during the collision the biggest? A) Case 1 B) Case 2 Fave = Case 1 P t Case 2 A) It's like punching a brick wall and punching a pillow B) The rubber contracts and expands exerting more force. Mechanics Lecture 13, Slide 17 Prof. Selen, I have been trying to remember where I have seen you before… WhysGuy (2:30) Mechanics Lecture 13, Slide 18 Demo – similar concept p = m ( v f - vi ) t = time between bounces H Fave = h vi p t = reading on scale vf Scale vi = - 2 g H vf = 2 gh Mechanics Lecture 13, Slide 19 HW Problem with demo Mechanics Lecture 13, Slide 20 pi q q pf Another way to look at it: P = pf -pi -pi pf mv |PX | = 2mv cos(q)cosq |PY | = 0 Mechanics Lecture 13, Slide 21 |FAVE | = |P | /t = 2mv cos(q) /t Mechanics Lecture 13, Slide 22 pi pf Another way to look at it: P = pf -pi pf -pi FAVE = P/t |P| = |pf –pi| = m|vf –vi| t = P/FAVE K = 1 2 1 2 mv f - mvi 2 2 Mechanics Lecture 13, Slide 23