Q: Consider a system in which a mass ( m1 = 6kg ) moves in the +x-direction at ( 2 m/s ) as a mass ( m2 = 2kg ) moves in the -x-direction at ( – 4 m/s ): How may we use the center of mass ( c.o.m. ) of this system toContinue reading “ENERGY AND MOMENTUM: Elastic Collisions and the Center of Mass Velocity ( Part 3 )”
Tag Archives: Galilean transformation
ENERGY AND MOMENTUM: Elastic Collisions and the Center of Mass Velocity ( Part 2 )
In Part 1 of this entry, it was determined that the center of mass between objects moving with constant velocities is also constant ( vcm ): We will now use mass ( kg ) and instantaneous-distance coordinates along ( x ) to determine the system’s center of mass. Let’s begin using the x-coordinates of (Continue reading “ENERGY AND MOMENTUM: Elastic Collisions and the Center of Mass Velocity ( Part 2 )”
ENERGY AND MOMENTUM: Stacked Ball Drop, Impulse, and the Galilean Transformation
Q: Three balls of mass m1, m2, and m3 fall together towards the earth. They accelerate until impact, and once the three-ball system collides elastically with the earth’s surface, the balls within the system approach one another with an instantaneous velocity ( v ). The momentum ( p = mv ) = ( m1 +Continue reading “ENERGY AND MOMENTUM: Stacked Ball Drop, Impulse, and the Galilean Transformation”