Iniciar sesión

Elastic collision of a system demands conservation of both momentum and kinetic energy. To solve problems involving one-dimensional elastic collisions between two objects, the equations for conservation of momentum and conservation of internal kinetic energy can be used. For the two objects, the sum of momentum before the collision equals the total momentum after the collision. An elastic collision conserves internal kinetic energy, and so the sum of kinetic energies before the collision equals the sum after the collision. We can understand this better with the help of a problem.

Let’s try to calculate the velocities of two objects following an elastic collision, given that mA = 0.50 kg, mB = 3.5 kg, vA1x = 4.0 m/s, and vB1x = 0 m/s.

The initial conditions imply that a small object strikes a larger object that is initially at rest. There are two unknowns (the final velocities vA2x and vB2x), which should be found. Because this collision is elastic, the equations for conservation of momentum and conservation of energy can be used. They are given by,

Equation1

Equation2

Both can be simplified because object B is initially at rest, and thus vB1x = 0 m/s.

Equation3

Equation4

Substituting the known values into these equations, we obtain vA2x = -3 m/s and vB2x= 4 m/s. The negative sign indicates that the first object bounces backward. The result of this example is reasonably intuitive: a small object strikes a larger one at rest and bounces backward. The larger one is knocked forward but with a low speed. This is like a compact car bouncing backward off a full-size SUV that is initially at rest.

This text is adapted from Openstax, University Physics Volume 1, Section 9.4: Types of Collisions.

Tags
Keyword Extraction Elastic CollisionConservation Of MomentumConservation Of Kinetic EnergyOne dimensional CollisionInitial ConditionsFinal VelocitiesRelative MotionCompact CarFull size SUV

Del capítulo 9:

article

Now Playing

9.10 : Colisiones elásticas: caso práctico

Momento lineal, impulso y colisiones

9.8K Vistas

article

9.1 : Momento lineal

Momento lineal, impulso y colisiones

13.0K Vistas

article

9.2 : Fuerza y momento

Momento lineal, impulso y colisiones

11.8K Vistas

article

9.3 : Impulso

Momento lineal, impulso y colisiones

14.9K Vistas

article

9.4 : Teorema impulso-momento

Momento lineal, impulso y colisiones

10.5K Vistas

article

9.5 : Conservación de la cantidad de movimiento: introducción

Momento lineal, impulso y colisiones

13.9K Vistas

article

9.6 : Conservación de la cantidad de movimiento: Resolución de problemas

Momento lineal, impulso y colisiones

9.3K Vistas

article

9.7 : Tipos de colisión - I

Momento lineal, impulso y colisiones

6.1K Vistas

article

9.8 : Tipos de colisión - II

Momento lineal, impulso y colisiones

6.4K Vistas

article

9.9 : Colisiones elásticas: introducción

Momento lineal, impulso y colisiones

8.9K Vistas

article

9.11 : Colisiones en dimensiones múltiples: introducción

Momento lineal, impulso y colisiones

4.2K Vistas

article

9.12 : Colisiones en dimensiones múltiples: resolución de problemas

Momento lineal, impulso y colisiones

3.3K Vistas

article

9.13 : Centro de masa: introducción

Momento lineal, impulso y colisiones

10.5K Vistas

article

9.14 : Significado del Centro de Masa

Momento lineal, impulso y colisiones

5.9K Vistas

article

9.15 : Energía Potencial Gravitacional para Objetos Extendidos

Momento lineal, impulso y colisiones

1.3K Vistas

See More

JoVE Logo

Privacidad

Condiciones de uso

Políticas

Investigación

Educación

ACERCA DE JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. Todos los derechos reservados