Quick Q: Is direction of velocity relevant in conservation?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on the relevance of velocity direction in energy conservation problems, particularly in collisions. It clarifies that while kinetic energy (KE) calculations focus solely on the magnitudes of velocities, momentum, which includes direction, is crucial in collision scenarios. The conversation highlights that energy is conserved only in elastic collisions, while inelastic collisions often result in energy loss due to vehicle deformation. Participants emphasize that the angles involved in collisions do not affect KE calculations, as the energy is derived from the magnitudes of velocity vectors. Overall, the direction of velocity is significant for momentum but not for kinetic energy in conservation equations.
Samei
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Homework Statement

: [/B]I just have a quick question about direction of velocity in solving for energy conservation problems. Since energy has no direction, do different angles ever affect the outcome? Like say in a collision where a truck hits three other vehicles and sends all three in different directions. The resulting velocity on each would be lower since it has direction (i.e., v*cos(45)), would it not? And so, how can energy conservation account for this?

I apologize if this is a very basic question. I'm just curious.

Homework Equations

: [/B]Conservation of Energy: KE + PE = KE + PE

The Attempt at a Solution

: [/B]Since this is more of a conceptual question, I don't really have an attempt.
 
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Angles are involved with momentum.

Kinetic energy calculations do not include angles, just the magnitudes of the velocities of bodies. Major vehicle collisions would usually not conserve kinetic energy, most result in vehicle remodellng and this soaks up energy.
 
NascentOxygen said:
Angles are involved with momentum.

Kinetic energy calculations do not include angles, just the magnitudes of the velocities of bodies. Major vehicle collisions would usually not conserve kinetic energy, most result in vehicle remodellng and this soaks up energy.

I almost forgot about magnitudes. That should explain it. Thanks!
 
Samei said:
I almost forgot about magnitudes. That should explain it. Thanks!
Are you sure? As NascentO posted, KE is not much use in collisions. You need to work with momentum instead, and that has direction.
E.g. consider a head on collision between two cars of the same mass and same initial speed, compared with a collision at right angles.
 
haruspex said:
Are you sure? As NascentO posted, KE is not much use in collisions. You need to work with momentum instead, and that has direction.
E.g. consider a head on collision between two cars of the same mass and same initial speed, compared with a collision at right angles.

This is when elastic and inelastic collisions comes into play, right?
Energy is conserved only in elastic, so it is applied there.

I was just curious how the angles "disappear" when I use it in energy conservation. My teacher did not include them in his calculations, and I figured at first he was just simplifying the problem because he was in a rush. But the book does the same thing. Then, it got me thinking how the conservation laws ever account for the fact that the cars in a collision can be thrown in different directions.
 
Samei said:
This is when elastic and inelastic collisions comes into play, right?
Energy is conserved only in elastic, so it is applied there.

I was just curious how the angles "disappear" when I use it in energy conservation. My teacher did not include them in his calculations, and I figured at first he was just simplifying the problem because he was in a rush. But the book does the same thing. Then, it got me thinking how the conservation laws ever account for the fact that the cars in a collision can be thrown in different directions.
KE is ##\frac 12 m \vec v.\vec v = \frac 12 m |\vec v|^2##. The dot product of a vector with itself produces a scalar which only depends on the magnitude of the vector.
 
haruspex said:
KE is ##\frac 12 m \vec v.\vec v = \frac 12 m |\vec v|^2##. The dot product of a vector with itself produces a scalar which only depends on the magnitude of the vector.

I think that's what I forgot. The vector already includes the direction. So then the magnitude is all accounted for.

Thanks again for clarifying! :)
 
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