Energy Conservation: Kinetic Energy After Collision

In summary: You'd better check the definition of kinetic energy. If the body is moving, it has kinetic energy."In summary, energy can be neither created nor destroyed. It is the ability to do work. Work is equal to force multiplied by displacement. When a body of mass 'm' is moving at a uniform velocity 'v', the work done is zero, and therefore the energy is also zero. However, if this body collides with another body at rest, there will be a change in momentum and a force and displacement will be present, meaning that work is done and energy is relevant. The formula for kinetic energy is KE = 1/2 * m * v^2, which applies to a body moving with a uniform velocity.
  • #71
newTonn said:
In your calculation (significant areas bolded by me) is incorrect.

since acceleration is 120000 m/s2 final velocity will be 120000 m/s

Substituting this will give a contact of 600 m which is impossible.

Look, the numbers are irrelevant. They can be tweaked such that you get realistic values. The point is that there is an interval of contact and the ball is displaced while in contact with the club and thus there is a velocity while the ball is in contact with the club.

What are you trying to prove newTonn?
 
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  • #72
Ariste said:
Look, the numbers are irrelevant. They can be tweaked such that you get realistic values. The point is that there is an interval of contact and the ball is displaced while in contact with the club and thus there is a velocity while the ball is in contact with the club.

What are you trying to prove newTonn?
Please substantiate your argument with some numbers to get some realistic values.
 
  • #73
newTonn said:
Please note that you are calculating velocity per millisecond( 60meter/millisecond),when you are using 1 millisecond contact time,so the velocity is as i calculated 60,000 meter/sec.So it makes no sense to me.

Sorry. I can't help you, if simple math is too complicated for you.

v = a*t= 60*10^3 m/sec *10^(-3)sec= 60 m/sec.
 
  • #74
Cthugha said:
Sorry. I can't help you, if simple math is too complicated for you.

v = a*t= 60*10^3 m/sec *10^(-3)sec= 60 m/sec.
Yes you cannot help.
please help me on this.
a car was at rest.
car started and moved 60 meter in 1 second.
what is the velocity of car?
and please tell me what is the acceleration of the car in this time interval?
please don't tell me acceleration is 60000m/sec.

And please note that if you reduce the time interval to calculate the acceleration,you have to reduce the distance (because car reach 60 meter only at the end of 1 second).
 
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  • #75
Oh, come on. Please tell me, that you are just kidding and trying to fool us all.

newTonn said:
car started and moved 60 meter in 1 second.
what is the velocity of car?
and please tell me what is the acceleration of the car in this time interval?
please don't tell me acceleration is 60000m/sec.

mean velocity: 60 m/sec, velocity after 1 sec: 120 m/sec.
The acceleration (assumed as constant): 120 m/sec^2

Calculate it yourself using s=1/2 a t^2 and v=a*t

By the way: An acceleration of 60000 m/sec^2, which lasts for 1 ms would give (almost) the same result. An acceleration of 60000000 m/sec^2, which lasts for 1 [tex]\mu[/tex]s as well. And so on.

newTonn said:
And please note that if you reduce the time interval to calculate the acceleration,you have to reduce the distance (because car reach 60 meter only at the end of 1 second).

I don't see your problem. You seem to hang on to a belief, that forces have to act continuously (or at least 1 second), which is pure nonsense.
As long as an acceleration acts on the car, it speeds up. Afterwards it continues at constant speed. Do you understand that?

Is it clear that an acceleration of 60 m/sec^2 and an acceleration of 60 [tex]\mu[/tex]m/ms^2 are exactly the same?

Is it clear, that an acceleration of 10 m/sec^2, which acts for 1 second and an acceleration of 20 m/sec^2, which acts for 0,5 seconds lead to the same final velocity?
 
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  • #76
Cthugha said:
Oh, come on. Please tell me, that you are just kidding and trying to fool us all.
A very big same to you.

mean velocity: 60 m/sec, velocity after 1 sec: 120 m/sec.
The acceleration (assumed as constant): 120 m/sec^2

Calculate it yourself using s=1/2 a t^2 and v=a*t

By the way: An acceleration of 60000 m/sec^2, which lasts for 1 ms would give (almost) the same result. An acceleration of 60000000 m/sec^2, which lasts for 1 [tex]\mu[/tex]s as well. And so on.



I don't see your problem. You seem to hang on to a belief, that forces have to act continuously (or at least 1 second), which is pure nonsense.
As long as an acceleration acts on the car, it speeds up. Afterwards it continues at constant speed. Do you understand that?

Is it clear that an acceleration of 60 m/sec^2 and an acceleration of 60 [tex]\mu[/tex]m/ms^2 are exactly the same?
Fantastic.What is that new unit of acceleration?

Is it clear, that an acceleration of 10 m/sec, which acts for 1 second and an acceleration of 20 m/sec, which acts for 0,5 seconds lead to the same final velocity?
Please anybody else out there?

Now i understand why you din't see any problem.
 
  • #77
newTonn said:
Fantastic.What is that new unit of acceleration?

New unit? I am just using micrometers and milliseconds.

By the way: Please quote me correctly.

In the second quote, there should be 10 m/sec^2 and 20 m/sec^2.
 
  • #78
Cthugha said:
New unit? I am just using micrometers and milliseconds..
Unfortunately Only 'Milli' (or micro)will be there because meter will be canceled by the meter in denominator.
By the way: Please quote me correctly.

In the second quote, there should be 10 m/sec^2 and 20 m/sec^2.
So you mean basically all the accelerations are 10m/sec^2 (we will say 20m/sec^2 if it acts only 0.5 second and we will call 40m/sec^2 if it acts 0.25 seconds only and so.on...
By the way ; i cannot quote more correctly than this
 
  • #79
newTonn said:
Unfortunately Only 'Milli' (or micro)will be there because meter will be canceled by the meter in denominator.

There is no meter in the denominator. ms is short for millisecond. It is just microseconds/millisecond^2

newTonn said:
So you mean basically all the accelerations are 10m/sec^2 (we will say 20m/sec^2 if it acts only 0.5 second and we will call 40m/sec^2 if it acts 0.25 seconds only and so.on...

The mean accelerations averaged over 1 second are in this case always 10 m/sec^2. The instantaneous accelerations (and of course the time span, in which they act) do vary.

newTonn said:
By the way ; i cannot quote more correctly than this

The ^2 was missing. Maybe it is a problem of the quotation function. I don't know.
 
  • #80
Cthugha said:
There is no meter in the denominator. ms is short for millisecond. It is just microseconds/millisecond^2.
then at least cancel one second from denominator.
And you should use same time interval for calculating accelerations.

for example, a = v/t (since initial velocity is zero)
or a = d / t^2
here you used time for velocity as 1 second
and the other t as 1 * 10^-3 seconds
if we are calculating acceleration for 10^-3 seconds ,then we have to correct it for 1 second (as you say in the case of 10 m/s^2 ;is same as telling
 
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  • #81
newTonn said:
then at least cancel one second from denominator.
And you should use same time interval for calculating accelerations.

for example, a = v/t (since initial velocity is zero)
or a = d / t^2
here you used time for velocity as 1 second
and the other t as 1 * 10^-3 seconds
if we are calculating acceleration for 10^-3 seconds ,then we have to correct it for 1 second (as you say in the case of 10 m/s^2 ;is same as telling

You are again confusing the concepts of mean acceleration and instantaneous acceleration.
a= v/t is only true for constant acceleration. Otherwise that formula is not valid. Instantaneous acceleration is [tex]\frac{dv}{dt} [/tex], so you have to use the differential form.

There is no need to correct anything for 1 second, if the acceleration does not act for 1 second. You just need to know the acceleration and its time dependence. Then you get:

[tex]v= \int_{t_0}^{t_1} a(t) \ dt[/tex]

So only intervals, when a is not 0, contribute to the final velocity.

In the case of the golf ball, we have a=const (let's say 5000N divided by the mass of the golf ball) for about 1 millisecond and a=0 afterwards.

Is it clear, that this situation leads to the same final velocity as an acceleration of 5N divided by the mass of the golf ball, which acts for 1 second.
Is it also clear, that the necessary contact time is much shorter in the first case (1 millisecond) than it is in the second case (1 second)?
 
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  • #82
newTonn said:
Please substantiate your argument with some numbers to get some realistic values.

I already did! Yet you ignore that post. This whole argument is getting ridiculous. You are trying to challenge the fundamentals of Newtonian physics, and you're just plain wrong. You've been proved wrong multiple times in this thread already, and yet you seem to just ignore good advice. I don't know what you're after here, but look man - Newton was right and you are wrong. End of story.

P.S. -

Ariste said:
The ball is displaced while it is in contact with the club. It's only displaced by a small amount before it leaves the club, but it is definitely displaced.

Here, I'll give you some mathematical figures. Assume that the ball weighs .05kg and that it reaches a final velocity of 80 m/s. Thus the club gives the ball .5(.05)(80)^2 = 160J of kinetic energy. This means that the club did 160J of work on the ball. Let's assume that the club exerts an average force of 3200N on the ball. Using the formula W=Fd we conclude that the ball was in contact with the club for 160/3200 = .05m.
 
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  • #83
newTonn said:
In your calculation (significant areas bolded by me) is incorrect.

since acceleration is 120000 m/s2 final velocity will be 120000 m/s

Substituting this will give a contact of 600 m which is impossible.

It is you who are not correct here.

WHY is your velocity the same as your Accel? That makes no sense.

Velocity = Acceleration * TIME
are you assuming we keep that acceleration over a WHOLE SECOND? Cause in my post I mention a specific time. (0.00166 seconds) as the contact time.
So do that V=AT calculation please with my acceleration and my time and tell me what velocity you get for the golfball.

I think you have a misunderstanding of units. a = dv/dt. If you know your acceleration (from knowing the force applied and the mass of the ball) then you have A. If you know how fast the ball is after contact, you have V. You assume the ball is at rest first.
If you have A and V, T=V/A

Change in Velocity = Acceleration * Time that object is Accelerating
 
  • #84
Ariste said:
I already did! Yet you ignore that post. This whole argument is getting ridiculous. You are trying to challenge the fundamentals of Newtonian physics, and you're just plain wrong. You've been proved wrong multiple times in this thread already, and yet you seem to just ignore good advice. I don't know what you're after here, but look man - Newton was right and you are wrong. End of story.

P.S. -

It doesn't sound like he's trying to challenge anything (other than our patience :) i kid, i kid) He just misunderstands a little physics, and is having a tough time changing how he views the physical world.
NewTonn, please believe what we're telling you. We're right about this, and once you realize that, you can understand WHY we're right, and then you'll agree. You have to use our definitions of physical properties (like force, acceleration, mass) if you're going to talk about them. Theres no other way. Thats what they are.

Each object has a position. X.
If that position changes constantly over some period of time, you have a velocity. V.
If that position changes NOT contantly over some period of time, that means the velocity V is constantly changing over some period of time. You then have a constant acceleration, A.
If your acceleration is in constant change over a period of time you have what some engineers refer to as "Jerk".

Momentum is a massful object traveling at some speed V. P=MV
A force is a change in momentum, dp/dt, which really is a change in velocity times the mass. A change in velocity is acceleration. So a force becomes a mass in acceleration.

If you apply a force over a period of time, you have a term called Impulse. Impulse = Force*Time Applied

If you apply a foce over a distance, you have performed Work, W = Force*Distance Applied

During the Golfball example, there is an IMPULSE on the ball. That is, a force acting on the ball over some period of time.
When I say "over" i do not mean "divided by" but rather multiplied by, so that the longer you apply the force, or the greater the force, the more the Impulse.

This impulse would then be N*Seconds, or N*milliseconds, or any Force Unit * Time Unit.

As for these units, really that works with any term.

Velocity is Distance Unit divided by Time Unit. It does not matter which units you chose so long as you convert it during operations to a common unit with respect to other velocities.

Acceleration is Velocity Unit divided by Time Unit.
For accel you could even have something as crazy as:
m/(micros*s)
meters per microsecond per second.
Its just a measure of change over some period of time.
 
  • #85
The thread is about the conservation of energy, but i don't find anything about energy or conservation, Newton, pls state ur idea clearly, what is ur objection? What is bugging u about these three laws of Newton?
 
  • #86
If you read early on he had the misconception that there was energy being done for an object with a constant velocity because some force had to keep it going.
 
  • #87
Healey01 said:
If you apply a force over a period of time, you have a term called Impulse. Impulse = Force*Time Applied


This impulse would then be N*Seconds, or N*milliseconds, or any Force Unit * Time Unit.
Thank you for your descriptive post.Still if your patience is not lost.

My dis agreement starts with the above portion of your post.

Let us see the right hand side of equation.

=Force * Time applied

= Mass * acceleration * Time applied

let us see the units of this

= (Kg) * (m/s^2) * s

= kg m /s

This is momentum.

Ultimately you are using impulse(mometum) in the place of Force (at least in case of the ball).

Is there something wrong or not?
 
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  • #88
Healey01 said:
Change in Velocity = Acceleration * Time that object is Accelerating
Please change your equation as
rate of Change in velocity = Acceleration
 
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  • #89
newTonn said:
My dis agreement starts with the above portion of your post.

Let us see the right hand side of equation.

=Force * Time applied

= Mass * acceleration * Time applied

let us see the units of this

= (Kg) * (m/s^2) * s

= kg m /s

This is momentum.
What "disagreement"? Healey01 was describing impulse, which equals the change in momentum. Of course it has units of momentum. :rolleyes:


Ultimately you are using impulse(mometum) in the place of Force (at least in case of the ball).

Is there something wrong or not?
Sure there's something wrong: You desperately need to sit down with a basic physics text and learn something about Newton's laws, impulse, and momentum. (I gave you links on Newton's laws; here's one on impulse: http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/impulse.html" )

This thread has gone on long enough. Despite the valiant efforts of many, this thread is just going in circles.
 
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