How Does Collision Time Affect Impulse and Momentum Change?

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around the concepts of impulse and momentum change in the context of two collision scenarios involving a truck. The scenarios differ in the time taken to stop the truck after colliding with different objects, prompting questions about the effects of collision time on impulse and momentum.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Conceptual clarification, Assumption checking

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • The original poster attempts to analyze the change in momentum and impulse for two different collision scenarios, questioning whether the time taken to stop affects these quantities. Participants discuss the implications of force in relation to impulse and injury.

Discussion Status

Some participants affirm the original poster's reasoning regarding momentum and impulse, indicating that the answers provided are correct. There is a focus on clarifying the relationship between impulse, force, and injury, with some reassurance offered to the original poster about their thought process.

Contextual Notes

The original poster expresses uncertainty about their answers, particularly in relation to the wording of the questions and the implications of the time intervals in the collision scenarios. There is a mention of a previous exploration that has not been completed, which may influence the understanding of the problem.

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Homework Statement



Consider the two examples that follow:

Example A. The figure below shows a truck coasting at a speed of 30mph just before it hits a large, impenetrable b ridge abutment. The truck's engine is off. The truck is brought very quickly to a complete stop in a time interval of Δt=0.020s when it has a collision with bridge abutment.

Example B. The figure below shows a truck, identical to the truck in Example A, coasting at a speed of 30 mph just before it hits a series of large barrels containing water or sand. The trucks engine is off. The truck is brought more slowly to a complete stop in a time interval of Δt=0.20s when it has a collision with the large barrels.

a) Which truck has a larger change in momentum during its collision when it is brought to a stop?

b) Which truck has a larger impulse during the collision when it is brought to a stop?

c) If you were a civil engineer trying to make bridge abutments safer for vehicles that collide with them what would you do? You should consider your answers to the previous two questions and the results of Exploration 20 (which we haven't done yet) as you formulate your answer to this question.


Homework Equations



J=ΔP=m(Vf-Vi)

The Attempt at a Solution



I wrote for problem a) that "Assuming the trucks have the same mass, considering that they each have identical initial and final velocities the two trucks would have the same change in momentum because of the formula ΔP=m(Vf-Vi)"

And problem b) I wrote " Impulse for each truck would be the same again assuming the masses are the same because of J=ΔP=m(Vf-Vi)".

I thought I had it questions a) and b) correct until I read c) and now I'm not so sure. In my notes I have that J=ΔP=m(Vf-Vi), however that FavgΔt=m(Vf-Vi). I mean if questions a or b had asked about force, my answers to them would have been different because of the change in time interval for each scenario, but they didn't they specifically asked about impulse and change in momentum.

My answer to c would be something like "In order to make the bridge abutments safer I would increase the time interval and lessen the force of the impulse."

Am I correct in my statements considering the way the questions are worded? I don't think you need the figures and I haven't changed any wording.
 
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Your answers to questions a) and b) are perfectly correct. And your answer to c is most reasonable.
 
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Hello Sylis. Yes, you are thinking correctly! It's not impulse that causes injury, it's force.
 
Thank you. I started to second guess myself there at the last part. Appreciate the reassurance.
 

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