UrbanXrisis
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When two isolated objects collide in an inelastic collision, why is kinetic energy not conserved?
I was going a problem where it gave me three choices. They were Totaly Energy, Linear Momentum, and Kinetic energy. I picked that all three were conserved. Total energy always must be conserved, momentum is always conserived. I wasnt sure about KE. Can someon explain to me why that is?
Lets say a 2kg cart moving at 2m/s eastward collides inelastically with a 1kg cart moving at 1m/s westward.
The total KE is 4.5J
KE_{total}=.5m_{1}v_{1}^2+.2m_{2}v_{2}^2
KE_{total}=.5*2kg*(2m/s)^2+.2*1kg*(1kg)^2
KE_{total}=4+.5=1.5J
After the carts colide...
v_{final}=(m_{1}v_{1}+m_{2}v_{2})/(m_{1}+m_{2})
v_{final}=v_{final}=(2kg*2m/s+1kg*1m/s)/(2kg+1kg)
v_{final}=5/3
KE_{total}=(1/2)(3kg)(5/3)^2
KE_{total}=25/6=4.17J
What happened to the 0.33 joules?
I was going a problem where it gave me three choices. They were Totaly Energy, Linear Momentum, and Kinetic energy. I picked that all three were conserved. Total energy always must be conserved, momentum is always conserived. I wasnt sure about KE. Can someon explain to me why that is?
Lets say a 2kg cart moving at 2m/s eastward collides inelastically with a 1kg cart moving at 1m/s westward.
The total KE is 4.5J
KE_{total}=.5m_{1}v_{1}^2+.2m_{2}v_{2}^2
KE_{total}=.5*2kg*(2m/s)^2+.2*1kg*(1kg)^2
KE_{total}=4+.5=1.5J
After the carts colide...
v_{final}=(m_{1}v_{1}+m_{2}v_{2})/(m_{1}+m_{2})
v_{final}=v_{final}=(2kg*2m/s+1kg*1m/s)/(2kg+1kg)
v_{final}=5/3
KE_{total}=(1/2)(3kg)(5/3)^2
KE_{total}=25/6=4.17J
What happened to the 0.33 joules?