How Do Newton's Third Law and Forces Affect Hockey Player Collisions?

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SUMMARY

The discussion centers on the application of Newton's Third Law and the Second Law of Motion in the context of hockey player collisions. A 100 kg player and a 112 kg player collide, each exerting a force of 50N. The textbook correctly states that the acceleration of the 112 kg player is 0.89 m/s², while the 100 kg player experiences an acceleration of -1.0 m/s². This discrepancy arises because the acceleration is inversely proportional to mass, confirming that both players do indeed move despite the equal and opposite forces acting on them.

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hya_been
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So I have a homework question that says:
A 100 kg hockey player a 112kg hockey player collide with each other each traveling with a force of 50N.

The textbook answer says that the acceleration of the 112kg is 0.89m/s^2
and the acceleration of the 100kg player is -1.0 m/s^2.

I'm confused because according to Newton's third Law there will be equal and opposite reaction forces so wouldn't they not move? Is the textbook wrong or am I?
 
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Remember by the second law:

F = m a

They both impart a force of 50N on each other, but the acceleration is also scaled by their masses. 50N on a 100kg person will push them farther than 50N on a 112kg person.


Imagine pushing a shopping cart with 50N. An empty shopping cart will go really far, whereas a full shopping cart will go a much shorter distance. In both instances the force is the same, but:

a = \frac{F}{m}
 
calculating acceleration

So you do 100/100 and 100/112 even though the total of the forces equals 0 because its 50 + -50??
 
The net force of the entire system is 0, but the force on each player is of magnitude 100N. You can find the acceleration of each player using

a = \frac{F}{m}. Knowing F = 100N and m = 100kg for person 1,

a = \frac{100N}{100kg} = 1.0m/s^2

F = 100N and m = 112kg for person 2:

a = \frac{100N}{112kg} = 0.89m/s^2
 
Thank You!

Thank-you you are a saviour!
 

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