View Full Version : kinetic energy question
okay i have a problem that deals with an elastic collision. so i have the mass of obj A and B and i found the initial velocity of A and B, and i have the final velocity of A and B
so now i want to find the change in Kinetic Energy, so i am doing
.5(mA + mB)( velocity final ^2) - .5(mA + mB)( velocity initial^2)
but what i am confused about is what i am suppose to use for the final velocity and initial velocity. i mean do i just add if initial velocities of obj A and B and use that as Vi, and add up the final velocities of obj A and B and use that as Vf? i dont think that seems right? any help would be great!
fliinghier
Nov12-07, 07:01 PM
check your equations again they, as are incorrect.
the change in KE = .5mVf^2 - .5mVi^2 . is that incorrect?
fliinghier
Nov12-07, 07:04 PM
no but the way you combined the mass was. the masses are different objects. KE1 + KE2
i am sorry i dont understand what you mean. i cannot combine the masses to make
.5 ( mA+mB) vf^2 ? how come?
fliinghier
Nov12-07, 07:10 PM
you have 2 different velocities, do you not?
yes i have 2 diff initial velocity for A and B and 2 diff final velocities for A and B
fliinghier
Nov12-07, 07:12 PM
what is the KE of an object?
fliinghier
Nov12-07, 07:15 PM
so what do you get when you add the KE of 2 objects?
fliinghier
Nov12-07, 07:16 PM
why don't you try adding the KE's and see what happens?
i can't add the KE's b/c i dont know how to use the velocity in the equations. i know i need to use the final and initial, but my only problem is that i have 2 intials and 2 finals. and i dont know how to use that. i dont have a problem to solve, i am just asking because this is a concept i am getting stuck on.
fliinghier
Nov12-07, 07:21 PM
...
how do you add one plus two? now add KE1 plus KE2. the final KE equals the initial KE. does your text have examples? i can assure you if it does that there is a problem like this one.
ok thank you for your help. i will go look for an example
fliinghier
Nov12-07, 07:31 PM
i'm sorry but the general rules on this forum are to help people arrive at their own solutions. it is clear from your approach that you never learned the material or otherwise never remembered it. perhaps paying attention or reading your book will help. if you'd rather not do those two, i hear wikipedia has all the answers.
moncheri
Nov12-07, 07:35 PM
To find the change in KE you use the formula KE = .5mv^2
so the KEi (initial) is .5*m,a*vi,a^2 + .5*m,b*vf,b^2
you do KE,f the same way but with the final velocities
then you do KEf - KEi
does this answer your question?
thank you moncheri. i did not think you were allowed to do this way because i thought you needed to keep the initial velocities separate from the final velocities. i am confused because how can you put the final velocity of b, with the initial velocity of a like you did. thank you for responding!
and fliinghier- yes i am aware of the general rules of this board. i am not asking you to give me an answer to a problem, i am asking for help to understand an equation. thank you though
moncheri
Nov12-07, 07:45 PM
i dont understand why youre confused - i kept the initial velocities separate .. you have to add the KEi of a with the KEi of b .. because before the collision the two objects a and b are seperate, correct? If they're together that's a different story - maybe I don't understand?
Well, I thought anyway that during an elastic collision KE is conserved. Right?
no no sorry i am confusing you! you are right, the two objects are separate before and after the collision.
fliinghier
Nov12-07, 07:50 PM
to klm: i'm sorry if i made it difficult on you. i was trying to get an answer along the lines of KE1 + KE2 out of you. here's what you do:
KE1i + KE2i =KE1f +KE2f
i think i understand how to do it. thank you for all your help :)
thank you fliinghier. i wasn't sure what the rules were and if you could just add things together like that. thank you for explaining!
vBulletin® v3.8.7, Copyright ©2000-2012, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.