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You know that a collision must be “elastic” if: (1) The colliding objects stick together. (2) The colliding objects are stretchy or squishy. (3) The sum of the final kinetic energies equals the sum of the initial kinetic energies. (4) There is no change in the internal energies of the objects (thermal energy, vibrational energy, etc.). (5) The momentum of the two-object system doesn’t change.

Short Answer

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3) The sum of the final kinetic energies equals the sum of the initial kinetic energies and 4) there is no change in the internal energies of the objects (thermal energy, vibrational energy, etc.) and 5) the momentum of the two-object system doesn’t change.

Step by step solution

01

Significance of the law of conservation of momentum and elastic collision of a system

This law states that the momentum of a particular system before and after collision is constant if no external force acts on the system.

The total momentum of a system is conserved in an elastic collision and the mechanical energy is also conserved.

02

Determination of the elasticity of a collision

From the law of conservation of momentum, the momentum of a system gets conserved. Hence, all the bodies should be included while defining a system of bodies. However, when the objects collide and also bounce back between them, a moment redistribution amongst the bodies occurs. Moreover, in the elastic collision, the initial and the final kinetic energy of an object does not change.

Thus, 3) the sum of the final kinetic energies equals the sum of the initial kinetic energies and 4) there is no change in the internal energies of the objects (thermal energy, vibrational energy, etc.) and 5) the momentum of the two-object system doesn’t change.

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Most popular questions from this chapter

Consider a head-on collision between two objects. Object 1, which has mass m1, is initially in motion, and collides head-on with object 2, which has massm2and is initially at rest. Which of the following statements about the collision are true?

(1)p1,initial=p1,final+p2,final.

(2)|p1,final|<|p1, initial|.

(3) Ifm2m1, then|Δp1|>|Δp2|.

(4) Ifm1m2, then the final speed of object 2 is less than the initial speed of object 1.

(5) Ifm2m1, then the final speed of object 1 is greater than the final speed of object 2.

A spring has an unstretched length of 0.32 m. a block with mass 0.2 kg is hung at rest from the spring, and the spring becomes 0.4 mlong.Next the spring is stretched to a length of 0.43 mand the block is released from rest. Air resistance is negligible.

(a) How long does it take for the block to return to where it was released? (b) Next the block is again positioned at rest, hanging from the spring (0.4 m long) as shown in Figure 10.43. A bullet of mass 0.003 kg traveling at a speed of 200 m/s straight upward buries itself in the block, which then reaches a maximum height above its original position. What is the speed of the block immediately after the bullet hits? (c) Now write an equation that could be used to determine how high the block goes after being hit by the bullet (a height h), but you need not actually solve for h.

In an elastic collision involving known masses and initial momenta, how many unknown quantities are there after the collision? How many equations are there? In a sticking collision involving known masses and initial momenta, how many unknown quantities are there after the collision? Explain how you can determine the amount of kinetic energy change.

What properties of the alpha particle and the gold nucleus in the original Rutherford experiment were responsible for the collisions being elastic collisions?

A Fe-57 nucleus is at rest and in its first excited state, 14.4 keV above the ground state (14.4 × 103 eV, where 1 eV = 1.6×10−19 J). The nucleus then decays to the ground state with the emission of a gamma ray (a high-energy photon). (a) Wthe recoil speed of the nucleus? (b) Calculate the slight difference in eV between the gamma-ray energy and the 14.4 keV difference between the initial and final nuclear states. (c) The “Mössbauer effect” is the name given to a related phenomenon discovered by Rudolf Mössbauer in 1957, for which he received the 1961 Nobel Prize for physics. If the Fe-57 nucleus is in a solid block of iron, occasionally when the nucleus emits a gamma ray the entire solid recoils as one object. This can happen due to the fact that neighbouring atoms and nuclei are connected by the electric interatomic force. In this case, repeat the calculation of part (a) and compare with your previous result. Explain briefly

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