Conservation of momentum & energy

AI Thread Summary
Conservation of momentum and energy can be applied in problems involving electricity, but their use depends on the specifics of the scenario. Momentum conservation is applicable when two objects are interacting, while energy conservation can be used even if one object is at rest. However, both laws can often be required to solve a problem effectively, especially in cases involving kinetic and potential energy. It's crucial to analyze each problem individually to determine which conservation laws will provide the necessary insights. Practicing a variety of problems will help develop an intuition for when to apply these principles.
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Homework Statement


Good evening phsyicsforum. I am having a lot of trouble finding out what must be true for me to use conservation of momentum or energy (sometimes both) in problems involving electricity. Below I will post 2 different questions and what they conservation they use.

1. Find the initial velocity of an alpha particle with a mass of 6.64 x 10^-27 kg and a charge of +3.2 x 10^-19 C, if it undergoes a head-on "collision" with a gold nucleus. You may assume the gold nucleus does not move at all during the interaction. The charge on the gold nucleus is +2.53 x 10^-17 C and the distance of closest approach between the two is 4.7 x 10^-15

2. An alpha particle moving at 3.0 x 10^6 ms [east] (m2= 6.64 x 10^-27 kg and q2= +3.2 x 10^-19 C) is headed directly towards a proton moving at 5.0 x 10^6 m/s [west] (m1= 1.67 x 10^-27 kg, q1 = 1.6 x 10^-19 C). Find the distance of closest approach assuming that they start from a very far apart position.

Homework Equations


Pto=Ptf

Eto=Etf

The Attempt at a Solution



Now I don't want any help answering the question itself because that is quite easy. I am only having trouble deciding when it is true to use conservation of momentum or energy or both.

Do I only use conservation of momentum when 2 objects are moving? And is conservation of energy used when only one object is moving and 1 is at rest?
 
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Generally, that's true. The conservation laws are of course always true, it's just a matter of whether the variables they open up allow you to solve for desired quantities. For example, in the first problem, conservation of momentum is true and can be used, but it's not going to get you anywhere. You can know that the initial momentum equals the final momentum, so initial velocity equals final velocity, and you don't know either. So in that case you would look to energy conservation.

And there are of course some exceptions to those rules. Consider this situation: two blocks travel at different velocities along a frictionless surface. The block in front travels slower, and has a spring attached to one side of it, facing the other block, which is moving faster. To solve for things here, there's both momentum conservation and energy conservation.

Most important I think is to just do a lot of problems, and you can start to feel which laws will be most helpful based on the scenario.
 
Ok thanks a lot for your input jackarms. I have a question to ask back to you. Let's say for a question that didn't really require conservation of momentum and you could just use conservation of energy. If I solved using both conservation of momentum and energy, would it affect my answer? or would I get the same answer, just with a lot more steps?
 
No, as long as you don't misinterpret anything in the problem, you'll never get two different answers with two logical sequences of steps. And in almost all cases problems can't be solved using either law, and it's much more common that both laws are required. The only case I can think of where either would work would be a problem where only kinetic energy is involved -- kinetic energy tends to be the link between energy and momentum. If you throw potential energy in the mix, that can only be explained by energy, except in special cases.

Hope this has helped at least a bit. I'd say the best thing to do for any problem is to consider conservation of anything you can think of and see where it get you.
 
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