14. A wooden block (mass M) is hung from a peg by a massless rope. A speeding bullet (with mass m and initial speed v0) collides with the block at time t = 0 and embeds in it. Let S be the system consisting of the block and bullet. Which quantities are conserved between t = −10 s and t = +10 s?
(A) The total linear momentum of S.
(B) The horizontal component of the linear momentum of S.
(C) The mechanical energy of S.
(D) The angular momentum of S as measured about a perpendicular axis through the peg.
(E) None of the above are conserved.
My reasoning was that the bullet, as it is embedded into the block, has most of its velocity absorbed by the interior of the block
... and then what happens?
Usually it is quicker to take each option one at a time.
But you have a nice list ...
1) p is conserved in the absence of external forces
2) L is conserved in the absence of external torque
3) Mech E is conserved if no energy is lost due to external forces
... "external" to what? Anyway - rephrase your list as questions:
1. are their any external forces to the system being brought to bear?
2. are their any external torques to the rotating part?
3. is their any energy loss (note: does not have to be due to "external forces")?
... from those answers you have characterized the system so the options will make sense.
Science is not about knowing answers, it is about asking uncomfortable questions.
Learning how to ask hard questions is basically the main point of science education.