Idjot said:
Isn't it a difference in momentum that causes the difference in speed?
Momentum doesn't cause speed; momentum is a property related to speed.
ie. momentum = mass * velocity
Heavier objects are usually harder to slow down then lighter objects because they have greater mass; except when gravity is doing the slowing down.
It is the difference in mass that will make objects harder or easier to slow down. A heavier car will take more force to slow down and speed up than a lighter car. The same force will slow down a heavier car less than it slows down a lighter car.
They are not harder to slow down because they have greater velocity. If they are going faster then it just takes longer to slow them down but the rate of change to the velocity remains the same for the same force over the same time.
There are two parts to momentum: mass & velocity. Only one of these can make it harder or easier to slow down a car; not both (ie. the mass). The other part then follows how long it takes to slow down the car for that mass.
I'm showing two examples following: the first where we have different initial speeds, and the second where we have different massed cars.
I'm using the generalised units L for length, T for time and M for mass. You could consider L to be kms, T to be hrs and M to be 1000 kg if you like.
The formula to work out the new speed is: velocity2 = velocity + (-force / mass) * time.
Example 1:
Let's say a car traveling at 1L/T has a mass of 2M and you apply a reverse force of 1ML/T^2 and you apply this force for 1T.
This will give: 1L/T - 1ML/T^2 / 2M * 1T = 1L/T - .5L/T = .5L/T
Let's say the same car is traveling at 2L/T and the force and time are the same.
This will give: 2L/T - 1ML/T^2 / 2M * 1T = 2L/T - .5L/T = 1.5L/T
Let's say the same car is traveling at 3L/T and the force and time are the same.
This will give: 3L/T - 1ML/T^2 / 2M * 1T = 3L/T - .5L/T = 2.5L/T
Let's say the same car is stopped and the force and time are the same.
This will give: 0L/T - 1ML/T^2 / 2M * 1T = 0L/T - .5L/T = -0.5L/T
So you get the following for the same mass, force & time but different initial speed:
(initial speed, mass, force, time, final speed):
s1=0, m=1, f=1, t=1, s2=-0.5
s1=1, m=1, f=1, t=1, s2=0.5
s1=2, m=1, f=1, t=1, s2=1.5
s1=3, m=1, f=1, t=1, s2=2.5
Example 2:
Let's say a car traveling at 1L/T has a mass of 1M and you apply a reverse force of 1ML/T^2 and you apply this force for 1T.
This will give: 1L/T - 1ML/T^2 / 1M * 1T = 1L/T - 1L/T = 0L/T
Let's say a car twice as heavy starts at the same speed and the force and time are the same.
This will give: 1L/T - 1ML/T^2 / 2M * 1T = 1L/T - .5L/T = 0.5L/T
Let's say a car four times as heavy starts at the same speed and the force and time are the same.
This will give: 1L/T - 1ML/T^2 / 4M * 1T = 1L/T - .25L/T = .75L/T
So you get the following for the same initial speed, force & time but different mass:
(initial speed, mass, force, time, final speed):
s1=1, m=1, f=1, t=1, s2=0
s1=1, m=2, f=1, t=1, s2=0.5
s1=1, m=4, f=1, t=1, s2=0.75
Only mass changes how much acceleration (or deceleration) is achieved for the same force (except under gravity where mass of the ball does not matter). The speed does not change the acceleration. Speed is changed by the acceleration amount. Acceleration is simply the amount the speed will be changed. You would have a catch 22 situation if speed affected acceleration and acceleration affected speed. Which is doing the affecting?
In the above examples you can see that the speed of each car with different initial speeds changed by the same amount even when the car started stopped. This is because acceleration acts directly upon the speed. But in the second example, where the mass changes, the amount of acceleration also changes (except under gravity).
Hopefully that is a bit clearer but keep at me if it isn't.
Idjot said:
Isn't it the difference in speed that causes the difference in altitude?
It is movement that causes the change in altitude. Speed is how quickly that movement causes that change. So yes faster relative speed does mean more distance will be covered if that is what you mean.
Idjot said:
Isn't it the difference in altitude that causes the difference in gravity?
Yes.
Idjot said:
Doesn't that mean that a difference in momentum can cause a difference in gravity, albeit indirectly?
Very indirectly.
Idjot said:
Isn't it the difference in Gravity that causes the difference in deceleration?
Yes.
Idjot said:
Doesn't that mean that a difference in momentum can cause a difference in deceleration, albeit indirectly?
Very indirectly.
I say 'very indirectly' because the momentum is nothing without considering where the balls are now which is what really determines the amount of deceleration acting on them. Momentum will help to get them there but it can not be squeezed into any formula for current deceleration. Only the altitude and mass of the Earth can determine this; not the momentum of the balls. Momentum can only be put into formulas that determine where the object is now after also supplying where it was before, the force applied and the time over; and then only where the force is not gravity. Only speed needs to be considered when acting under gravity; not momentum.