tiny-tim said:
Come on, Shahid0072, you
know this …
torque = rate of change of angular momentum …
if there's no torque about the centre of mass, no angular momentum is transferred …
and if there's no friction,
where will the torque come from?
I was trying to think of which lack of friction you were talking about. Did you mean the friction that could have come from the first ball in a non elastic collision? That would certainly introduce torque. Imagine the extreme inelastic case, where both balls stick together. The second ball certainly has acquired angular momentum from the interaction.
Or did you mean the lack of friction from the surface the balls are on? The first ball hitting the second ball, even in an elastic collision, would transfer its linear momentum. If there was friction from the ground, the second ball would begin spinning by virtue of the fact it is moving linearly at all on a surface with friction. There would be torque there, from the ground.
You could have meant both.
But that led me to think about the billiard balls that dacruick talked about earlier in the thread. However, with a difference.
Let's imagine a surface with extremely high friction. The first ball approaches the second ball. The first ball has both linear and angular momentum. Let's imagine the collision is perfectly elastic. Let me know if the following is true: The first ball hits the second and transfers its linear momentum to the second. It does
not transfer any angular momentum to the second ball and so the first ball effectively ends it spinning because of the friction with the table (dispersed as heat).
The second ball must begin spinning on this extremely high friction surface in order to linearly translate across it. It has taken 0% of the first ball's angular momentum, and 100% of the first ball's linear momentum and has turned that 100% linear momentum into part linear and part angular. Which means this second ball is not moving as quickly as the first ball was. Is this correct?