Monsterboy said:
Does this same result apply for head on collision ?
I think the answer to your question is NO.
The mathematics (solution of the two sumiltaneous equations) yields a pair of answers: (3,2) and (1.8,2.8) One of those answers represents the velocities before the collision and the other represents the velocities after. (3,2) is clearly the before situation, so (1.8, 2.8) is the situation after collision.
Because they are traveling in the same direction, all the velocities were positive (they could also all be negative - you just change your perspective. after all , a positive, rightward velocity is exactly the same as a negative, leftward velocity. (face Right and run forwards (normally) vs face Left and "run backwards"; you are still traveling the same way.
(Note also: because all the velocities were in the same direction - be could just concern ourselves with the magnitudes of those velocities (the speed), but to start looking at just speed for every problem can lead to errors - we must always start by looking at
velocities..
If you consider the head on collision, one of the velocities before-hand has to be negative - either will do. So the initial state is (3,-2) or (-3,2) depending which direction you chose to be positive.
Once you apply the maths (solve the simultaneous equations) you get two answers (3, -2) and (-3, 2) one of those represents before, the other after So is (3,-2) is before - (-3,2) is after but if (-3,2) is before the (3,-2) is after.
If that seems confusing, let's say positive velocity means going East, while Negative is going West. The before/after pair (3,-2) - (-3,2) means (3E, 2W) changing to (3W, 2E) each mass changes direction.
Note:
The other answer (3,2) becoming (1.8, 2.8) means (3E, 2E) becoming (1.8E, 2.8E). No direction change, just one mass slowed down (from 3 to 1.8) while the other sped up (from 2 to 2.8)
Using the "centre of mass calculation" for the head on collision: the velocity of the Centre of Mass is zero - leading to an almost trivial solution.
Each mass is approaching the centre of mass at its assigned speed. After collision, each body will be rebounding from the CofM at exactly that same speed. SO the SPEED of each body will be the same before and after, but the VELOCITY will be very much different; 3 m/s vs -3m/s and -2 m/s vs 2 m/s. ( or 3E become 3W and 2W become 3E)