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Lecture 15 Goals Employ conservation of momentum in 1 D & 2D Introduce Momentum and Impulse Compare Force vs time to Force vs distance Introduce Center-of-Mass Note: 2nd Exam, Monday, March 19th, 7:15 to 8:45 PM Physics 201: Lecture 15, Pg 1 Comments on Momentum Conservation More general than conservation of mechanical energy Momentum Conservation occurs in systems with no net external forces (as a vector quantity) Physics 201: Lecture 15, Pg 2 Explosions: A collision in reverse A two piece assembly is hanging vertically at rest at the end of a 20 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? After If the time of the explosion is short then Before momentum is conserved in the x-direction because there is no net x force. This is not true of the y-direction but this is what we are interested in. Physics 201: Lecture 15, Pg 3 Explosions: A collision in reverse A two piece assembly is hanging vertically at rest at the end of a 20 m long massless string. The mass of the two pieces are 60 and 20 kg respectively. Suddenly you observe that the 20 kg mass 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 external force in the x-direction the x-momentum 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 201: Lecture 15, Pg 4 Explosions: A collision in reverse A two piece assembly is hanging vertically at rest at the end of a 20 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 acy = M V2/r = T – Mg T = Mg + MV2 /r = 600 N + 60x(10)2/20 N = 900 N Physics 201: Lecture 15, Pg 5 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 201: Lecture 15, Pg 6 Exercise Momentum is a Vector (!) quantity x-direction: No net force so Px is conserved. y-direction: Net force, interaction with the ground so depending on the system (i.e., do you include the Earth?) py is not conserved (system is block and cart only) 2 kg 5.0 m 30° Let a 2 kg block start at rest on a 30° incline and slide vertically a distance 5.0 m and fall a distance 7.5 m 7.5 m into the 10 kg cart 10 kg What is the final velocity of the cart? Physics 201: Lecture 15, Pg 7 Exercise Momentum is a Vector (!) quantity 1) ai = g sin 30° = 5 m/s2 x-direction: No net force so Px is conserved y-direction: vy of the cart + block will be zero and we can ignore vy of the block when it 2) d = 5 m / sin 30° lands in the cart. j = ½ ai Dt2 N i 5.0 m 30° mg 30° Initial Final Px: MVx + mvx = (M+m) V’x M 0 + mvx = (M+m) V’x V’x = m vx / (M + m) = 2 (8.7)/ 12 m/s V’x = 1.4 m/s 10 m = 2.5 m/s2 Dt2 2s = Dt v = ai Dt = 10 m/s vx= v cos 30° = 8.7 m/s 7.5 m y x Physics 201: Lecture 15, Pg 8 Impulse (A variable external force applied for a given time) Collisions often involve a varying force F(t): 0 maximum 0 We can plot force vs time for a typical collision. The impulse, I, of the force is a vector defined as the integral of the force during the time of the collision. The impulse measures momentum transfer Physics 201: Lecture 15, Pg 9 Force and Impulse (A variable force applied for a given time) J a vector that reflects momentum transfer t t p I F dt ( dp / dt ) dt dp F Impulse I = area under this curve ! (Transfer of momentum !) t Dt Impulse has units of Newton-seconds ti tf Physics 201: Lecture 15, Pg 10 Force and Impulse Two different collisions can have the same impulse since I depends only on the momentum transfer, NOT the nature of the collision. F same area F Dt Dt big, F small t Dt t Dt small, F big Physics 201: Lecture 15, Pg 11 Average Force and Impulse F Fav F Fav Dt Dt big, Fav small t Dt t Dt small, Fav big Physics 201: Lecture 15, Pg 12 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 201: Lecture 15, Pg 13 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 201: Lecture 15, Pg 15 A perfectly inelastic collision in 2-D If no external force momentum is conserved. Momentum is a vector so px, py and pz are conseved V v1 q m1 + m2 m1 m2 v2 before after x-dir px : m1 v1 = (m1 + m2 ) V cos q y-dir py : m2 v2 = (m1 + m2 ) V sin q Physics 201: Lecture 15, Pg 16 2D Elastic Collisions Perfectly elastic means that the objects do not stick and, by stipulation, mechanical energy is conservsed. There are many more possible outcomes but, if no external force, then momentum will always be conserved Before After Physics 201: Lecture 15, Pg 17 Billiards Consider the case where one ball is initially at rest. after before pa q pb vcm Pa f F The final direction of the red ball will depend on where the balls hit. Physics 201: Lecture 15, Pg 18 Billiards: Without external forces, conservation of both momentum & mech. energy 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 If the masses of the two balls are equal then there will always be a 90° angle between the paths of the outgoing balls Physics 201: Lecture 15, Pg 19 Center of Mass Most objects are not point-like but have a mass density and are often deformable. So how does one account for this complexity in a straightforward way? Example In football coaches often tell players attempting to tackle the ball carrier to look at their navel. So why is this so? Physics 201: Lecture 15, Pg 20 System of Particles: Center of Mass (CM) If an object is not held then it will rotate about the center of mass. Center of mass: Where the system is balanced ! Building a mobile is an exercise in finding centers of mass. m1 + m2 m1 + m2 mobile Physics 201: Lecture 15, Pg 21 System of Particles: Center of Mass How do we describe the “position” of a system made up of many parts ? Define the Center of Mass (average position): For a collection of N individual point-like particles whose masses and positions we know: RCM m2 m1 (In this case, N = 2) mi ri N rCM r1 r2 y x m1r1 m2 r2 m3r3 i 1 N M mi i 1 Physics 201: Lecture 15, Pg 22 Momentum of the center-of-mass is just the total momentum Notice rCM 1 M mi ri N i 1 N d d 1 r ( dt CM dt M mi ri ) i 1 N d 1 vCM ( M mi dt ri ) i 1 N MvCM pCM mi vi p1 p2 p3 ... i 1 Impulse and momentum conservation applies to the center-of-mass Physics 201: Lecture 15, Pg 23 Sample calculation: Consider the following mass distribution: mi ri N rCM i 1 M XCM î YCM ĵ ZCM k̂ XCM = (m x 0 + 2m x 12 + m x 24 )/4m meters RCM = (12,6) YCM = (m x 0 + 2m x 12 + m x 0 )/4m meters (12,12) 2m XCM = 12 meters YCM = 6 meters m (0,0) m (24,0) Physics 201: Lecture 15, Pg 24 A classic example There is a disc of uniform mass and radius r. However there is a hole of radius a a distance b (along the x-axis) away from the center. Where is the center of mass for this object? rgreen disk CM (0,0) rhole CM (b,0) m 2 r yCM xCM 0 m b ( ) a 2 m ( ) a 2 0 m 0 ( ) a 2 m ( ) a 2 bma 2 / r 2 m ma 2 / r 2 0 ba 2 b 2 a 2 Physics 201: Lecture 15, Pg 25 System of Particles: Center of Mass For a continuous solid, convert sums to an integral. rCM dm y r r dm r dm M dm where dm is an infinitesimal mass element (see text for an example). x Physics 201: Lecture 15, Pg 26 Recap Thursday, Review for exam For Tuesday, Read Chapter 10.1-10.5 Physics 201: Lecture 15, Pg 27