ranon said:
In a perfectly inelastic collision, does
mv^2/2 + mgh = =(m+M)V + (m+M) gH with H the height after low point ?
I'm going to assume that you meant V
2. No, this equation is not true. Mechanical energy is not conserved here.
ranon said:
If seems not if there is energy dissipated in inelastic colision.
Of course! That's the
definition of an inelastic collision -- a collision in which kinetic energy is lost.
ranon said:
If the post collision Velocity is effected by the loss, than why isn't momentum effected"
The simple answer is, "because, in this situation, it is possible for the velocity to change while the momentum does not." If that still doesn't make sense, maybe this will help. Conservation of momentum before and after the collision says that:
mv = (m + M)V
with the result that the velocity after is lower than the velocity before:
\left(\frac{m}{m + M}\right)v = V
Now, the kinetic energy before the collision is just (1/2)mv
2. The kinetic energy after the collision is:
\frac{1}{2}(m+M)V^2
If you substitute in the above expression for V, you end up with the result that the kinetic energy afterwards is:
\frac{1}{2} \left(\frac{m^2}{m+M}\right)v^2
So, as you can see, as long as M is not zero, the final energy is always lower than the initial energy.
Summary: momentum is always conserved. But, as I have shown above, if momentum is conserved,
and the two masses stick together, then kinetic energy
cannot also be conserved -- it is impossible. The final kinetic energy will always be lower. Therefore, if the two masses stick together, you know that an inelastic collision has occured. In an elastic collision, the first mass would have bounced back.