Momentum (Physics)
Momentum (Physics)
Momentum (Physics)
MENTUM!
Momentum Defined
p = mv
p = momentum vector (kg.m/s)
m = mass (kg)
Momentum Facts
p = mv
Momentum is a vector quantity!
Velocity and momentum vectors point in the same direction.
SI unit for momentum: kg m /s (no special name).
A net force is required to change a bodys momentum.
Momentum is directly proportional to both mass and speed.
Something big and slow could have the same momentum as
something small and fast.
The greater the momentum the object has, the greater is the
effect it will have on another object during collision.
Equivalent Momenta
Equivalent Momenta
(cont.)
The train, bus, and car all have different masses and speeds,
but their momenta are the same in magnitude. The massive
train has a slow speed; the low-mass car has a great speed;
and the bus has moderate mass and speed. Note: We can
only say that the magnitudes of their momenta are equal
since theyre arent moving in the same direction.
The difficulty in bringing each vehicle to rest--in terms of a
combination of the force and time required--would be the
same, since they each have the same momentum.
Impulse Defined
Impulse is defined as the product force acting on an
object and the time during which the force acts. The
symbol for impulse is I. So, by definition:
I=Ft
Impulse Units
I = F t shows why the SI unit for impulse is the Newton second. There
is no special name for this unit, but it is equivalent to a kg m /s2.s
I= p
The
end
v1
m1
m2
m1 v1 - m2 v2 = - m1 va + m2 vb
after: p = - m1 va + m2 vb
va
m1
m2
vb
v1
m1
m2
m1 v1 - m2 v2 = - m1 va + m2 vb
va
m1
m2
vb
Sample Problem 1
35 g
7 kg
700 m/s
v=0
A rifle fires a bullet into a giant slab of butter on a frictionless surface.
The bullet penetrates the butter, but while passing through it, the bullet
pushes the butter to the left, and the butter pushes the bullet just as
hard to the right, slowing the bullet down. If the butter skids off at 4
cm/s after the bullet passes through it, what is the final speed of the
bullet?
(The mass of the rifle matters not.)
35 g
v=?
4 cm/s
7 kg
continued on next slide
Sample Problem 1
(cont.)
7 kg
= 24.5 kg m /s
v=0
35 g
4 cm/s
v=?
p before = p after
7 kg
700 m/s
= 0.28 + 0.035 v
v = 692 m/s
Sample Problem 2
35 g
7 kg
700 m/s
v=0
Same as the last problem except this time its a block of wood rather than
butter, and the bullet does not pass all the way through it. How fast do
they move together after impact?
v
7. 035 kg
v = 3.48 m/s
force on m due to M
Sample Problem 3
An apple is originally at rest and then dropped. After falling a short
time, its moving pretty fast, say at a speed V. Obviously, momentum
is not conserved for the apple, since it didnt have any at first. How can
this be?
answer: Gravity is an external force on the
apple
V
m
F
v
Earth
M
mV = M v
Sample Problem 4
A crate of raspberry donut filling collides with a tub of lime Kool Aid
on a frictionless surface. Which way on how fast does the Kool Aid
rebound?
answer: Lets draw v to the right in the after picture.
v = -3.1 m/s
10 m/s
4.5 m/s
3 kg
6 m/s
15 kg
15 kg
m1
v1
2 v
2
m1
va
m2
vb
before:
px = m1 v1 cos1 - m2 v2 cos2
py = m1 v1 sin1 + m2 v2 sin2
after:
px = -m1 va cosa + m2 vb cos b
py = m1 va sina + m2 vb sin b
p1
m2
p before
p2
p2
m1
a
pa
m2
pa
p after
b
pb
pb
Exploding Bomb
A
e
c
m
Acme
after
before
Exploding Bomb
(cont.)
40
0.3 kg
5 m/s
34 m/s
after
452 g
= 53.4908
Substituting into either of the first two
equations :
v = 9.14 m/s
Alternate Solution
40
5168
40
1500
sin
1500
sin 40
=
4132.9736
= 13.4908
Angular Momentum
Angular momentum depends on linear momentum and the distance
from a particular point. It is a vector quantity with symbol L. If r
and v are then the magnitude of angular momentum w/ resp. to
point Q is given by L = r p = m v r. In this case L points out of the
page. If the mass were moving in the opposite direction, L would
point into the page.
The SI unit for angular momentum
is the kg m2 / s. (It has no special
v name.) Angular momentum is a
conserved quantity. A torque is
needed to change L, just a force is
r
m needed to change p. Anything
spinning has angular has angular
Q
momentum. The more it has, the
harder it is to stop it from spinning.
L=rp
This formula works regardless of the angle. As you know from our
study of cross products, the magnitude of the angular momentum
of m relative to point Q is: L = r p sin = m v r. In this case, by
the right-hand rule, L points out of the page. If the mass were
moving in the opposite direction, L would point into the page.
v
r
Q
Moment of Inertia
Any moving body has inertia. (It wants to keep moving at constant
v.) The more inertia a body has, the harder it is to change its linear
motion. Rotating bodies possess a rotational inertial called the
moment of inertial, I. The more rotational inertia a body has, the
harder it is change its rotation. For a single point-like mass w/ respect
to a given point Q, I = m r 2. For a system, I = the sum of each mass
times its respective distance from the
m
point of interest.
r
m1
I = mr
I = mi ri 2
= m1 r12 + m2 r22
m2
r1
r2
Q
Two merry-go-rounds have the same mass and are spinning with the
same angular velocity. One is solid wood (a disc), and the other is a
metal ring. Which has a bigger moment of inertia relative to its
center of mass?
r
Angular Acceleration
As you know, acceleration is when an object speeds up, slows down,
or changes directions. Angular acceleration occurs when a spinning
object spins faster or slower. Its symbol is , and its defined as:
= /t
Note how this is very similar to a = v / t for linear acceleration.
Ex: If a wind turbine spinning at 21 rpm speeds up to 30 rpm over
10 s due to a gust of wind, its average angular acceleration is
9 rpm / 10 s. This means every second its spinning 9 revolutions per
minute faster than the second before. Lets convert the units:
9 rpm
9 rev
9 rev / min
9 (2 rad)
2
=
=
=
0.094
rad
/
s
=
10 s
min 10 s
10 s
(60 s) 10 s
Since a radian is really dimensionless (a length divided by a length),
the SI unit for angular acceleration is the per second squared (s -2).
net = I
L = mvr
r
v
m
net = r Fnet = r m a
= r m v / t = L / t
So net torque is the rate of change of angular momentum, just as net
force is the rate of change of linear momentum. continued on next slide
(cont.)
L = m v r = m r (r ) = m r 2 = I
This is very much like p = m v, and this is one reason I is
defined the way it is.
In terms of magnitudes, linear momentum is inertia times
speed, and angular momentum is rotational inertia times
angular speed.
L = I
p = mv
I = L = I
Angular Momentum, L
The greater the mass, the greater The greater the moment of
inertia, the greater the torque
the force needed to change
needed to change angular
momentum.
momentum.