Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Ch7 3 #4

8 comments:

Prof. Hobbs said...

See equation 7.3 in the lecture notes

Anonymous said...

I thought elastic collisions had no change in kinetic energy but the answer isn't 0.

Prof. Hobbs said...

The problem doesn't tell us it is elastic, so we have to decide ourselves. We can do this only after getting the speeds before and after the collisions and doing the energy conservation calculation.

Momentum is conserved because there are no external forces. So you vsn use momentum conservation to get the unknown speed, and then check is kinetic energy is conserved.

Anonymous said...

And I would also add to remember your signs when submitting your answer!

Anonymous said...

i am using the change in KE equation and I am not getting the right answer. what am i doing wrong?

Nathan Bruskin said...

Try using more sig figs in your answer, that solved the problem for me.

Anonymous said...

Final KE-Inital KE= DeltaKE

Prof. Hobbs said...

By "change in KE equation" do you mean the difference between the total KE after the collision and the total KE before the collision? This is the correct thing to do.