DM said:
And by "which type of collision", you surely referring to how fast the collision occurs, right?
In scientific terms, "type of collision" implies elastic or inelastic collisions.
i mean type as in...elastic or inelastic
Kinetic energy is the velocity at which the objects move. The linear conservation of momentum states that change in momentum before and after impact of two elastic objects are the same, hence 0.
You say that the velocities after collision depend on the material and mass of the object. What about the approaching collision speed? Why should it be any different?
throw a diamond at another diamond...the initial velocity doesn't matter, it'll be elastic
throw a lump of dough at a wall, it'll be mostly inelastic regardless of the initial speed
the reason i want to say velocity is because if you threw a diamond at a block of wood at a low velocity it would bounce off, if you threw it fast enough it would get stuck in the wood...but the reason it changes is basically because of the material,
you couldn't throw a piece of dough at another piece of dough with any velocity such that they would have a mostly elastic collision,
you couldn't throw a rubber ball at a wall fast enough for the rubber ball to stick to the wall,
even in extreme cases of velocity, the outcome doesn't change for the examples i listed above
this is not true for mass
could you make a block of wood so massive that no matter which speed you throw a rubber ball at it, it would be an elastic collision? yes
could you make a block of wood so light that the rubber ball would have a partially inelastic collision? yes
could you choose a hard material such that the collision would always be elastic when you throw a rubber ball at it, at any speed? yes
could you choose a material soft enough to have an inelastic collision with a rubber ball, at any speed? yesso you can choose extreme cases of velocity where the outcome only depends on the materials or mass
this would imply that velocity is not what determines what kind of collision will occur, but it can in some cases
that's why i want to say velocity but i think material and mass are more important
A lighter object is more able to travel faster than a heavier object,
any object of any mass can travel at any speed provided sufficient force
hence why the approaching speeds CAN be different.
uh...yeah, velocity isn't a constant...what's your point?