How Do You Solve for the Mass and Velocity of a Cart in an Elastic Collision?

AI Thread Summary
In an elastic collision problem involving two carts, the first cart with a mass of 340 g and an initial speed of 1.2 m/s collides with a stationary cart of unknown mass. After the collision, the first cart moves at 0.66 m/s, prompting the need to determine the mass and final velocity of the second cart. The conservation of momentum equation is applied, but initially presents two unknowns, necessitating a second equation derived from the conservation of kinetic energy. By solving the simpler momentum equation for the unknown mass and substituting it into the kinetic energy equation, both unknowns can be resolved. This approach effectively utilizes the principles of elastic collisions to find the required values.
PaleRider09
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Homework Statement


A cart with mass 340 g moving on a frictionless linear air track at an initial speed of 1.2 m/s undergoes an elastic collision with an initially stationary cart of unknown mass. After the collision, the first cart continues in its original direction at 0.66 m/s.
(a) What is the mass of the second cart?
(b) What is its speed after impact?
(c) What is the speed of the two-cart center of mass?


Homework Equations


I'll use this space to organize variables:
m1 = 0.34 [kg]
v1i = 1.2 [m/s]
v1f = 0.66 [m/s]


The Attempt at a Solution


Okay using the Conservation of Momentum model, I have:

m1v1i = m1v1f + m2v2f

So in order to find the mass of the second cart, I have:

(m1(v1i - v1f))/v2f = m2

And now I'm stuck because I don't have the final velocity of the second cart in order to compute its mass.
 
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Welcome to PF, Palerider.
You are in a common situation - two unknowns and only one equation.
You must find a second equation before you can solve for the two unknowns. The word "elastic" in the question is your clue. If you don't know what it means, look it up! "elastic collision" in Wikipedia will likely work.
 
Thank you for the welcome.
Okay so an elastic collision means that K is conserved throughout the collision.

Therefore:
(.5)m1v1i2 = (.5)m1v1f2 + (.5)m2v2f2

But that leaves me in the same situation as before doesn't it?
 
Looks good. Now you have two equations with two unknowns. You should be able to solve for both the unknown mass and unknown final velocity. Solve the simpler equation for m2, then sub that into the other equation.
 
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