Resulting directions and velocities of two circles colliding

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The discussion revolves around calculating the resulting x and y velocities of two identical circles colliding in a plane. The user seeks a formula to derive these velocities based on the initial velocities and coordinates at the point of collision. They have attempted to use vector mathematics, assuming a generic mass, but struggle with converting these vectors into specific x- and y-velocities. The conversation references established physics principles, particularly elastic collisions, and highlights the challenge of determining individual post-collision velocities from the combined initial velocities. Ultimately, the user is looking for clarity on how to isolate the final velocities for each circle after the collision.
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Homework Statement



I am trying to find the resulting x and y velocities when two moving circles (particles) which are exactly the same in mass and size and are in the same plane, collide, given the x and y velocities and coordinates of the two particles.

What is the formula for the resulting x and y velocities given the original x and y velocities and the coordinates of the circles at the exact point when the circles meet?

Homework Equations



The following formulas show the math for two particles using vectors and given the mass, but I don't know the mass off the particles, just that they are the same. Also, I am confused on how to convert vectors in a general formula to x- and y-velocities.

elastic_collision_18.png


The kinetic energy is below, I don't know if this helps:

elastic_collision_19.png


The Attempt at a Solution



Using the above formulas, and assigning a generic mass of 1g, I obtained two vectors which seemed to work. But how can I convert this to x- and y-coordinates in a formula?

Thanks for helping!
 
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Thanks, Spinnor. I see that if we add, say, the original x-velocities together, we get the sum x-velocity of both of the circles. However, the circles do not move the same direction after they collide. I am having trouble deriving the addends (the final x-velocities for each). For example, can find SOME NUMBER in this:

x1 + x2 = SOME NUMBER.

But how do I find x1 given this?
 
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