Chapter 7
Linear Momentum and Collisions
By Boundless
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Linear momentum is the product of the mass and velocity of an object, it is conserved in elastic and inelastic collisions.
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In the most general form, Newton's 2nd law can be written as
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Impulse, or change in momentum, equals the average net external force multiplied by the time this force acts.
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In an inelastic collision the total kinetic energy after the collision is not equal to the total kinetic energy before the collision.
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Glancing collision is a collision that takes place under a small angle, with the incident body being nearly parallel to the surface.
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An elastic collision is a collision between two or more bodies in which kinetic energy is conserved.
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To solve a two dimensional elastic collision problem, decompose the velocity components of the masses along perpendicular axes.
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Collisions may be classified as either inelastic or elastic collisions based on how energy is conserved in the collision.
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While inelastic collisions may not conserve total kinetic energy, they do conserve total momentum.
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The position of COM is mass weighted average of the positions of particles. Mathematically, it is given as
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We can describe the translational motion of a rigid body as if it is a point particle with the total mass located at the COM—center of mass.
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The center of mass (COM) is an important physical concept—it is the point about which objects rotate.
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The COM (center of mass) of a system of particles is a geometric point that assumes all the mass and external force(s) during motion.