Velocities of colliding particles (Kinetic and Potential Enegies)

AI Thread Summary
The discussion focuses on calculating the speeds of two charged beads, C and D, as they collide after being released from rest. The initial kinetic energies are zero, and the potential energy is determined by their distance apart, which is 9mm. The conservation of energy principle is applied, but the challenge arises in accounting for the kinetic energies of both beads at the moment of collision. There is clarification on how to treat the potential energy as the beads approach each other, emphasizing that the effective force is based on the distance between their centers. The conversation concludes with insights on the behavior of charged spheres and their effective charge distribution as they come into contact.
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Homework Statement



Two 2.0mm diameter beads, C and D, are 9.0mm apart, measured between their centers. Bead C has mass 1.0g and charge 2.5nC . Bead D has mass 1.5g and charge -1.0nC .
K= 9*10^9 Nm^2/C^2
Vinitials =0
mass of C= 1 g
mass of D= 1.5 g
charge of C = 2.5nC
charge of D = -1nC
distance r between them= 9mm

Homework Equations



a) If the beads are released from rest, what is the speed vc at the instant the beads collide?
b) If the beads are released from rest, what is the speed vd at the instant the beads collide?

The Attempt at a Solution


I start by setting up my diagram of the two beads lying on the x-axis. They are 9mm apart from the center, We know initial velocities of both are zero. So I decided to use the conservation of energies formula. Kintial +Uinitial = Kfinal + Ufinal
C: 1/2mvi^2 + (K*C*D)/rinitial = 1/2mvf^2 + (K*C*D)/rfinal

Both Initial Kinetic is zero since they start as rest, as well as Final potential because the distance between them would be zero

So I have (K*C*D)/rinitial = 1/2(mvf^2)
But we have to take into account the kinetic energy of Bead D as well. When doing a similar problem I was told that both Final Kinetic energies must be added. But I would have two unknowns. Both vfinals. I don't know where to go from here. Any hint?
Thanks
 
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Lets see if I understand you:
Both Initial Kinetic is zero since they start as rest, as well as Final potential because the distance between them would be zero
... I thought the potential changed as 1/d (d is the distance between their centers) ... but 1/0 is undefined.

But surely the beads stop before r=0?

Apart from that:
PE before the motion = PE after the motion + total kinetic energy.
But you also know something else that is conserved.
 
Last edited:
ok thanks for the reply/ so are you saying that the I should use the distance between the centers as rfinal for the PEfinal?
 
You can answer that question for yourself by looking at how the Coulomb force works.

For two spheres touching - only the charges immediately next to each other have zero separation - the charges on the rest of the two spheres are further apart. But - classically - the area of the contact is zero so the charge in the contact area is also zero.

If you crunch the numbers you'll find that for r>R (where R is the radius of the bead/sphere), the force acts as if the entire charge is concentrated in the center at r=0. But for r<R, the actual charge distribution matters. Fortunately, two hard beads of charge won't get their centers that close together.
 
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