Angular Momentum:Calculating Omega with Energy Preservation Law

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vlio20
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Hi to all,

the question is:

http://ufu.co.il/files/dyzh41xkp5amsfjpv4dk.png

the two sticks clash and stick one to the other, the plane is smooth friction.
the momentum of one stick (in it's own center of mass is 0.5*L^2*m).

the length of the sticks is L and the mass is m, the vertical's stick speed is v.

I have to find the angular speed (w- omega) that both sticks will rotate in, I have manged to do this with the angular momentum preservation law, and I would like to know how to this with energy preservation law.tnx

Homework Statement


Homework Equations


The Attempt at a Solution

 
on Phys.org
ok... my bad!
the energy is not the same before and after the clash- it is not an elastic clash
 
welcome to pf!

hi vlio20! welcome to pf! :smile:
vlio20 said:
… I would like to know how to this with energy preservation law.

you can't :redface:, it isn't! :biggrin:

(mechanical) energy is never conserved unless the question says so

in this case, it obviously isn't conserved, because the two bodies stick together, so it's a perfectly https://www.physicsforums.com/library.php?do=view_item&itemid=38"

https://www.physicsforums.com/library.php?do=view_item&itemid=53" and energy are enough to solve a problem … any extra equation (like a geometrical constraint) means that something has to go, and that's always the energy equation :wink:
 
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yes I have understand my mistake after I posted it.
the collision is a plastic and not elastic

tnx