Momentum + coefficient of restitution this is driving me nuts

In summary: thanks for your help dude. think i made it a lot harder than it should have been! :blushing:15.2/6=2.53333333333
  • #1
ar202
45
0
Momentum + coefficient of restitution this is driving me nuts!

Homework Statement



A Mass of 2kg traveling at 2m/s is struck by a mass of 4 kg traveling at 3m/s. If the coefficient of restitution for the two materials is 0.4 calculate their final velocities.

Homework Equations



M1U1+M2U2=M1V1+M2V2

E=V2-V1/U2-U1


The Attempt at a Solution



From what i know, the best way to do it is use both equations and create two simultaneous equations?

Is this correct? i seem to end up with V2=-1.2 however I am pretty sure this is wrong.

any help would be great.
 
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  • #2
Welcome to PF!

ar202 said:
A Mass of 2kg traveling at 2m/s is struck by a mass of 4 kg traveling at 3m/s. If the coefficient of restitution for the two materials is 0.4 calculate their final velocities.

i seem to end up with V2=-1.2 however I am pretty sure this is wrong.

Hi ar202! Welcome to PF! :wink:

Show us your full calculations, and then we'll see what went wrong, and we'll know how to help! :smile:
 
  • #3


Cheers dude :-)

first bit...

2*2+4*(-4)=2*V1+4*V2

-12=2*V1+4*V2

second bit...

0.4*2-0.4*4=v2-v1

2.4=v2-v1

so then i have

-12=2*V1+4*V2
+
4.8=2V2-2V1

which gives

-7.2=6V2...
 
  • #4
Hi ar202! :smile:

erm :redface: … you keep writing 4 instead of 3 …
ar202 said:
A Mass of 2kg traveling at 2m/s is struck by a mass of 4 kg traveling at 3m/s. If the coefficient of restitution for the two materials is 0.4 calculate their final velocities.
ar202 said:
2*2+4*(-4)=2*V1+4*V2



0.4*2-0.4*4=v2-v1

:cry:
 
  • #5


tiny-tim said:
Hi ar202! :smile:

erm :redface: … you keep writing 4 instead of 3 …



:cry:

haha so i have :p

the answer is still wrong... any tips?
 
  • #6
Have you checked that your signs for V1 and V2 are the right way round in both equations?

(and btw, were they traveling in the same direction originally, or in opposite directions?)
 
  • #7


tiny-tim said:
Have you checked that your signs for V1 and V2 are the right way round in both equations?

(and btw, were they traveling in the same direction originally, or in opposite directions?)

it doesn't mention directions, just that it is struck. I've found the answers - V1=2.53 & V2=2.93

still struggling to get to those answers.
 
  • #8
ar202 said:
it doesn't mention directions, just that it is struck. I've found the answers - V1=2.53 & V2=2.93

still struggling to get to those answers.

Well, then they're obviously going in the same direction originally …

relative speed before = 1, after = 0.4 :wink:
 
  • #9


tiny-tim said:
Well, then they're obviously going in the same direction originally …

relative speed before = 1, after = 0.4 :wink:

Ok so using the same method as before i can get V2=2.83 & V1=2.34

am i going about it the right way...?
 
  • #10
hmm … relative speed after = 0.49 … not close enough to 0.4 :redface:

you must be making a mistake somewhere, but without seeing the details, I can't say where.
 
  • #11


tiny-tim said:
hmm … relative speed after = 0.49 … not close enough to 0.4 :redface:

you must be making a mistake somewhere, but without seeing the details, I can't say where.

first part

2*2+4*3=2*v1+4*v2

0.4(3-2)=v2-v1 X 2 then I've added it to the first part...

so 18=6*v2

18/6=3 ... actually my answer was 3 for v2. I must be more tired than i thought :p
 
  • #12
oooh, i see it now …
ar202 said:
0.4(3-2)=v2-v1 X 2

… there's no "X 2" …

the coefficient of restitution is just |u1 - u2|/|v1 - v2| :wink:
 
  • #13


the 'X2' was the simultaneous equation part...
 
  • #14
ar202 said:
the 'X2' was the simultaneous equation part...

(just got up :zzz: …)

oh, it multiplied the whole equation!

ok, then your 18 should be 16.8 :wink:
 
  • #15


tiny-tim said:
(just got up :zzz: …)

oh, it multiplied the whole equation!

ok, then your 18 should be 16.8 :wink:


ok i finally got there :rolleyes:

got it down to 6v2=15.8

15.8/6=2.53333333333

thanks for your help dude. think i made it a lot harder than it should have been! :blushing:
 
  • #16
ar202 said:
15.8/6=2.53333333333

you do know that 15.2/6=2.53333333333 ? :wink:
 

1. What is momentum?

Momentum is a measure of an object's motion, calculated by multiplying its mass by its velocity.

2. How is momentum related to coefficient of restitution?

The coefficient of restitution is a measure of how much energy is conserved during a collision between two objects. Momentum is conserved in a closed system, and the coefficient of restitution is related to how much momentum is transferred between the objects during a collision.

3. How do you calculate momentum?

Momentum is calculated by multiplying an object's mass by its velocity. The formula is: momentum = mass x velocity.

4. What is the role of momentum in physics?

Momentum is an important concept in physics because it helps us understand how objects move and interact with each other. It is used to calculate the force and acceleration of an object, and is also conserved in interactions between objects.

5. How does coefficient of restitution affect the outcome of a collision?

The coefficient of restitution determines how much energy is transferred between objects during a collision. A higher coefficient of restitution means more energy is conserved and the objects will bounce off each other with greater force, while a lower coefficient of restitution means more energy is lost and the objects will have less force after the collision.

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