Elastic collision, frictionless surface

AI Thread Summary
In an elastic collision on a frictionless surface, two air hockey pucks collide: one with a mass of 0.050 kg moving right at 5.0 m/s and the other with a mass of 0.10 kg moving left at 2.0 m/s. The conservation of momentum and conservation of energy equations are applied to find the final velocities after the collision. The first step involves setting up the momentum equation and solving for one of the final velocities in terms of the other. Substituting this expression back into the momentum equation allows for solving the unknowns. The discussion emphasizes deriving the equations correctly and plugging in values to find the final velocities.
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Homework Statement


Two air hocky pucks collide head-on elastically on a frictionless surface. The smaller puck has a mass of 0.050 kg and is moving to the right at 5.0 m/s while the larger puck has a mass of 0.10 kg and is moving to the left with a speed of 2.0 m/s. Find the velocity of each after the collision.

Homework Equations


M1V1+M2V2=M1V'1+M2V'2
.5M1V1^2+.5M2V2^2=.5M1V'1^2+.5M2V'2^2

The Attempt at a Solution


I am pretty sure I must derive an equation from conservation of momentum and conservation of energy.
 
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That would be the way to do it.

Select a positive X direction and be careful of signs.

Two equations, 2 unknowns.
 
Cant anyone help me?
 
ok, could you give me an idea of what first step I should take?
 
first I take the conservation of momentum:
M1V1+M2V2=M1V'1+M2V'2

Then I solved for V'1

V'1=(M1V1+M2V2-M2V'2)/M1
Then I substituted this for V'1 in the original equation:
M1V1+M2V2=M1[(M1V1+M2V2-M2V'2)/M1]+M2V'2

so now the only unknown variable is V'2. I have little expierence deriving equations so I am not confident this is correct. though it certainly seems to be. to me anyways.
 
My first step would be to start plugging in the values and deriving the actual equations for this situation.

With the equations in hand then solve for the 2 velocities in the usual manner.
 
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