cereal9
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Homework Statement
Two objects with masses m1 and m2 are traveling in a frictionless surface and will collide perpendicular to each other (m1 is moving on the +x-axis, m2 is moving on the +y-axis). The distances of objects m1 and m2 from the collision point are d1 and d2 respectively.
Q: What Δv is required for m2 to avoid collision with m1 by a distance x?
http://dl.dropbox.com/u/12084119/image.PNG
Homework Equations
t=\frac{d}{v}
x=v_0t+\frac{1}{2}at^2
The Attempt at a Solution
So I'm having a bit of trouble understanding how to attack this problem. I think I'm lacking some fundamental understanding of kinematics.
- For m2 to collide with m1,
t_1=t_2
\frac{d_1}{v_1}=\frac{d_2}{v_2}
- For m2 to miss collision with m1 by a distance x I think that this has to be true,
t_2new=t_1new
t_2new=\frac{d_1+x}{v_1}
In my previous attempt I'd tried to solve for a new velocity required for m2 to travel the distance d2 like so:
v_2new=\frac{d_2v_1}{d_1+x}
Δv_2=v_2new-v_2
But this is not correct, since this would imply that there would be an immediate change in velocity when there should be an an acceleration to achieve that velocity.
So I know I need a time value for m2 and also an acceleration, which brings me to this:
d_2=v_2t_2+\frac{1}{2}a_2t^2_2
I'm stuck on how to figure out both a2 and t2 to allow for this collision to not occur. Or rather, for a new "collision" to occur where object m1 has already passed a distance of x by the time mass m2 arrives at the previous impact location. Any and all help is appreciated, I'm really stumped!
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