Conservation of momentum - Collision of pool balls

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around the conservation of momentum in a collision scenario involving two pool balls. The original poster is trying to understand the concepts of momentum and vector resolution in the context of the velocities of the balls before and after the collision.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Conceptual clarification, Mathematical reasoning, Problem interpretation

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • The original poster attempts to apply the conservation of momentum but is unsure about resolving the velocities into components. They question the meaning of "north 30 degrees east" and how to accurately represent the situation with a diagram. Other participants suggest resolving the velocities into x and y components and provide insights on interpreting the angles.

Discussion Status

Participants are actively engaging with the problem, offering guidance on vector resolution and diagram drawing. There is a focus on breaking down the velocities into components and applying conservation of momentum in both x and y directions. The original poster seeks confirmation on their approach, indicating a productive exchange of ideas.

Contextual Notes

The original poster expresses difficulty with directions and the underlying concepts of momentum, which may affect their understanding of the problem setup. There is an emphasis on ensuring clarity in the interpretation of angles and vector components.

crazedbeat
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Hi,

I am having trouble recalling my concepts in momentum. I just remember its conserved :rolleyes:

Plus, I am horrible with directions, so need help understanding this problem, as well as the underlying concepts.

Two pool balls are rolling along a pool table. The orange pool ball has a velocity of 15 cm/s west and the green ball a velocity of 15 cm/s north 30° east. What are the velocities of the balls after the collision?


What I am doing is as follows:

15*m + 15*m = m(15 + 15)
which doesn't take me anywhere

Do I need to resolve into x and y components?

So any help on this question would be greatly appreciated. I will try and return the help by helping others. (i.e. pay it forward!)
 
Last edited:
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Yeah, you need to resolve the velocities into components.
 
Okay, so if I resolve them, what exactly does North 30 degrees east mean? Is it north or east or north east? If its north east, what's the 30 degrees about?

How do I draw the diagram? The way I am drawing it right now, they never appear to collide?
 
The oragne ball will be a vector in the negative x direction magnitude 15cm. The green ball has 15cm north+30 degrees east. I would interpret this to be 30 degrees east of north, which would be 60 degrees from the x axis. At the point of collision, the two vectors will be nose-to-nose, so you can start from that point and draw the vectors from there. You can break down the green ball's vectors by making a triangle and using sin and cosin to find each component.

Then conserve momentum in each direction.
 
remember the i component is (magnitude)cos(angle from + x axis) and the j component is (magnitude)sin(angle from + x axis) then all you have to do is add them, and convert them back into angles and magnitudes (tan^-1 j/i is angle from + x axis, magnitude is sqrt (i^2 + j^2))

Or you can just draw a vector diagram and work it out with sin and cos rules.
 
So then would this be correct?

Momentum is conserved

x direction:
[tex]mv_{1} + mv_{2} = 2mv_{x}[/tex]
[tex]10 + 10cos(60) = 2v_{x}[/tex]
[tex]15 = 2v_{x}[/tex]
[tex]7.5 = v_{x}[/tex]

y direction:
It remains the same [tex]10sin(60)[/tex] for [tex]m_{2}[/tex]

I just want to know if I did this correctly :) After this, I would simply have to find the direction and composite velocity for the green ball.
 

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