Impulse and Momentum

Impulse and Momentum

Momentum is a measure of the motion of an object, taking into account both its mass and velocity. It is a fundamental concept for understanding collisions and explosions.

Linear Momentum and Impulse

Linear Momentum (p\mathbf{p})

Linear momentum is defined as the product of mass and velocity. p=mv\mathbf{p} = m \mathbf{v} It is a vector quantity pointing in the direction of velocity. The unit is kg\cdotm/s.

Impulse (J\mathbf{J})

Impulse is the change in momentum resulting from a force acting over a time interval. J=titfFdt=FavgΔt\mathbf{J} = \int_{t_i}^{t_f} \mathbf{F} \, dt = \mathbf{F}_{avg} \Delta t

Impulse-Momentum Theorem: The impulse applied to an object equals its change in momentum. J=Δp=pfpi\mathbf{J} = \Delta \mathbf{p} = \mathbf{p}_f - \mathbf{p}_i

Conservation of Momentum

Principle of Conservation of Linear Momentum: If the net external force acting on a system is zero, the total linear momentum of the system remains constant. pi=pf\sum \mathbf{p}_i = \sum \mathbf{p}_f m1v1i+m2v2i=m1v1f+m2v2fm_1 \mathbf{v}_{1i} + m_2 \mathbf{v}_{2i} = m_1 \mathbf{v}_{1f} + m_2 \mathbf{v}_{2f}

This principle applies to collisions and explosions.

Collisions

Collisions are interactions where objects exert relatively large forces on each other for a short time.

Elastic Collisions

Both momentum and kinetic energy are conserved. pi=pf\sum \mathbf{p}_i = \sum \mathbf{p}_f KEi=KEf\sum KE_i = \sum KE_f

Inelastic Collisions

Momentum is conserved, but kinetic energy is not (some energy is lost to heat, sound, or deformation).

  • Perfectly Inelastic Collision: The objects stick together after collision and move with a common velocity.
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