Calculate the change in the total kinetic energy

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Homework Help Overview

The problem involves a collision between two pucks on a frictionless air table, focusing on calculating the change in total kinetic energy of the system. Puck A is initially moving, while puck B is at rest, and the velocities after the collision are provided.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Assumption checking, Problem interpretation

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants discuss the initial conditions of the system, particularly the initial velocity of puck A, and its impact on the calculation of kinetic energy. There is an attempt to apply conservation of momentum to find the initial kinetic energy.

Discussion Status

The discussion is ongoing, with participants questioning the assumption that puck A's initial velocity is zero. Some guidance is provided regarding the need to consider momentum conservation to determine the initial conditions accurately.

Contextual Notes

There is uncertainty regarding the initial velocity of puck A, which is not specified in the problem statement. This leads to differing interpretations among participants about the initial kinetic energy of the system.

emeraldempres
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On a frictionless, horizontal air table, puck A (with mass 0.245 kg) is moving toward puck B (with mass 0.360 kg), that is initially at rest. After the collision, puck A has a velocity of 0.115 m/s to the left, and puck B has velocity 0.660 m/s to the right.

Calculate the change in the total kinetic energy of the system that occurs during the collision.

I tried putting it all into the change of kinetic energy equation but it does not work, this is my equation

.5(.245 kg)(-.155^2)+ .5(.36)(.66^2)= .08 J

But that answer is wrong, can smeone help?
 
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What's the initial velocity of puck A? Use that to find the initial KE of the system.
 
The initial velocity i believe to be 0 m/s because the answer does not specify. using this, since the ke is equal to .5mv^2, the initial ke is 0 J. am i on the right track?
 
Here, you have to solve for the initial conditions of the system. Puck A had some velocity that you can solve for using conservation of momentum, so its kinetic energy is not zero.

Puck B's initial kinetic energy is zero, though. But that's only important insofar that all of the initial momentum is in puck A.
 
emeraldempres said:
The initial velocity i believe to be 0 m/s because the answer does not specify. using this, since the ke is equal to .5mv^2, the initial ke is 0 J. am i on the right track?
The initial speed cannot be zero, otherwise there would be no collision:
emeraldempres said:
On a frictionless, horizontal air table, puck A (with mass 0.245 kg) is moving toward puck B
Make sure you post the complete problem exactly as it was given.
 

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