Principle of conservation of momentum question

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around applying the principle of conservation of momentum to a space vehicle that separates into two sections. Participants clarify that the initial momentum of the intact vehicle, calculated as the product of its total mass and velocity, must equal the sum of the momenta of the separated sections. The correct momentum equation is established, leading to the determination of the velocity of the heavier section after separation. Additionally, the change in kinetic energy is discussed, emphasizing that it should be calculated as the total kinetic energy of both sections post-separation minus the initial kinetic energy of the intact vehicle. The conversation highlights the importance of understanding momentum conservation in solving such problems.
dansbr
Messages
10
Reaction score
0
1. Somebody help explain how to do this for me, am not looking answer, an explanation so i can solve it would be great.

A space vehicle traveling at a velocity of 7000km/h separates into two sections of mass 1100kg and 200kg. the two parts continue moving in the same direction with the lighter section moving at 10000km/h.

Determine the velocity of the heavier section after separation
The change in the total kinetic energy of the system



2. I know to use the conservation of momentum (M1U1 + M2U1 = M1V1 + M2V2), but since there are three values for mass am not sure where to begin.



3. any attempt i have made has been unsuccessful

Cheers :)
 
Physics news on Phys.org
What's the mass and velocity of the space vehicle before it breaks up?
 
the space vehicle is traveling at 7000km/h. i don't know the mass of it but wouldn't it be the sum of the sections so 1100+200=1300kg
 
dansbr said:
the space vehicle is traveling at 7000km/h. i don't know the mass of it but wouldn't it be the sum of the sections so 1100+200=1300kg
Exactly. So now you have one side of the momentum conservation equation. Set the initial momentum (of the intact vehicle) equal to the sum of the momenta of the sections after it breaks up.
 
So if momentum is f=mv
Would the momentum of the intact vehicle be (200x10000)+(1100x v?)
Am still not sure about this
 
dansbr said:
So if momentum is f=mv
Would the momentum of the intact vehicle be (200x10000)+(1100x v?)
Am still not sure about this
The momentum of the intact vehicle is its mass (which you figured out already) times its velocity (which is given).
 
So the momentum of the intact vehicle is 1300x7000=9100000
Does that mean the sum of the momentums of the separate parts equal the momentum of the intact vehicle.
 
That's what conservation of momentum is about.
 
dansbr said:
So the momentum of the intact vehicle is 1300x7000=9100000
Does that mean the sum of the momentums of the separate parts equal the momentum of the intact vehicle.
Exactly. When something is "conserved" that means it stays the same. The total momentum of the of the vehicle (or its parts) doesn't change when it breaks up.
 
  • #10
Is the answer 6454km/h
 
  • #11
dansbr said:
Is the answer 6454km/h
Looks right.
 
  • #12
Then would the change in kinetic energy of the system be the kinetic energy of the intact vehicle minus the kinetic energy of the heavier of the two separate bits?
 
  • #13
dansbr said:
Then would the change in kinetic energy of the system be the kinetic energy of the intact vehicle minus the kinetic energy of the heavier of the two separate bits?
Not exactly. The change in KE is the total KE after the break up (both pieces) minus the initial KE (of the intact vehicle).
 
  • #14
Thanks good help
 
Back
Top