Debozo said:
Am I right in thinking that the laws of physics actually say motion cannot be either created or destroyed.
Am I wrong?
You are right in saying that in a system that is completely static, with no motion at all, nothing will move spontaneously... And motion will never be "created" in this system.
A more correct rule is that
momentum cannot be created or destroyed. The momentum that an object has is equal to its mass multiplied with its speed.
i.e. If a ball weighs 2kg, and is traveling at 10m/s it's momentum would be 20.
If this ball hits another ball that also weighs 2kg, and then they both start moving, then you can add the momentum of the two separate balls together, and it should theoretically equal 20. e.g. (After the collision) they are both traveling in the same direction with speeds of 3m/s and 7m/s:
(3*2)+(7*2)= 20
This is the same total momentum that the original ball had, and so momentum has not been created or destroyed.
In the real world however, some of the momentum of the original ball would be converted into sound and heat energy in the air, and the momentum of the two balls would not be exactly the same as it was originally. However, this does not break the law of conservation of momentum because the extra momentum given to the air particles should equal the loss in momentum between the two balls.
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Debozo said:
So I rediscovered tonight why we need to take direction into account. Cheers Doc ;-) (I'm such an idiot.)
Have you also discovered that mass needs to be taken into account? Because even the most fundamental particles in the world have different masses. e.g. Electrons and Protons must have very different velocities for their momentum to be the same.
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Just a question for an expert: If kinetic energy is converted into an electro magnetic wave , then is the conservation of momentum broken? Or does light have a kind of "momentum".