Momentum of an object and kinetic energy

AI Thread Summary
Doubling the speed of an object results in its momentum also doubling, as momentum is the product of mass and velocity. The kinetic energy, calculated using the formula 1/2mv^2, increases by a factor of four when the speed is doubled. This is because substituting the new velocity (2v) into the kinetic energy formula yields four times the original kinetic energy. The discussion emphasizes understanding the relationship between momentum and kinetic energy, particularly how changes in speed affect these quantities. Overall, the kinetic energy increases significantly when speed is increased.
amberlyp
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Homework Statement


the momentum of an object (originally with a non zero momentum) is doubled by doubling the speed. What happens to the kinetic energy? Justify your answer you should get a numerical answer.


Homework Equations





The Attempt at a Solution



well i know that momentum is the product of mass and velocity and velocity has to do with speed but I am not getting anywhere with this... i don't understand where a numerical value will come from someone please help me asap :frown:
 
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So you know that momentum increases proportionally with velocity. But do yo know the expression to find kinetic energy?
 
is it 1/2mv^2 ?
 
Yup. So can you take it from here?
 
The question you're supposed to answer is, "what happens to the kinetic energy?" When they say they want a numerical answer, they mean that they want you to answer in a quantitative way:

"The kinetic energy increases by a factor of ____," where ____ is your numerical answer,

and NOT in a purely qualitative way:

"The kinetic energy gets bigger too."
 
i still don't understand what numbers I am using there is no numbers given...? kinetic energy is increasing? I am sorry i feel stupid this is my first physics course though and my professor does not explian things well at all...
 
amberlyp said:
i still don't understand what numbers I am using there is no numbers given...? kinetic energy is increasing? I am sorry i feel stupid this is my first physics course though and my professor does not explian things well at all...

the momentum of an object (originally with a non zero momentum) is doubled by doubling the speed. What happens to the kinetic energy? Justify your answer you should get a numerical answer.
The way you could do this is by taking an object with a particular mass, then have it move a some velocity. Once you have the momentum, then find KE. Then they want you to double the momentum. So its like doubling the velocity. Then take the new velocity and find KE. Then you can answer the question, what happens to KE. Makes sense?
 
amberlyp said:
i still don't understand what numbers I am using there is no numbers given...? kinetic energy is increasing?

I already answered this:

cepheid said:
The kinetic energy increases by a factor of ____," where ____ is your numerical answer

So I've already given you part of the answer by stating that the KE increases. It's true that no numbers are given. You don't know what the starting KE is. But you know that it has some value. The key word in my explanation was the word "factor". If the speed doubles, you should be able to tell how the new value of the KE is related to the old one...ie by what factor it has changed (e.g. twice, three times...?). So in other words, the number you will obtain will give the value of the new KE relative to the value of the old KE (whatever that was). It won't give you the value in absolute terms. Does this difference between relative and absolute make sense?
 
yes thank you both :)
 
  • #10
if the momentum doubles by doubling the speed (2mv= m*2v) then kinetic energy increases by 4 times...substitute (2v) for (v) in the formula for kinetic energy 1/2*m*v*v...so the new KE is 1/2*m*2v*2v ...ie ...4(1/2*m*v*v)
 
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