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ELASTIC Collisions: Website: Http://phet - Colorado.edu

This document describes a physics lab experiment on momentum and collisions. Students will use an online simulation to study elastic and inelastic collisions between objects of different masses and velocities. They will record data before and after collisions and analyze whether momentum is conserved. Key points include defining elastic and inelastic collisions, forming hypotheses, and calculating momentum and velocities before and after collisions.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
55 views2 pages

ELASTIC Collisions: Website: Http://phet - Colorado.edu

This document describes a physics lab experiment on momentum and collisions. Students will use an online simulation to study elastic and inelastic collisions between objects of different masses and velocities. They will record data before and after collisions and analyze whether momentum is conserved. Key points include defining elastic and inelastic collisions, forming hypotheses, and calculating momentum and velocities before and after collisions.

Uploaded by

cristian r
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Physics

Unit 2 Mechanics
Lab #15 Momentum and Collisions

Name:
Date:

Period:

Website: http://phet.colorado.edu/
Play with the Sims Physics Motion Collision Lab
Introduction:
When objects move, they have momentum. Momentum, p, is the
product of an objects mass (kg) and its velocity (m/s). The unit for
momentum, p, is kgm/s. During a collision objects transfer momentum
to each other, resulting in different motions than before the collision. In
this activity you will study the motion colliding objects.

ELASTIC Collisions

1. What defines a collision as being elastic?


2. Make a hypothesis about initial and final momentums before playing with the sim.

3. Simulate the four elastic collisions below. Complete the table using math formulas and the simulation.

BEFORE COLLISION

#
1

m1
2.0 kg

m2
2.0 kg

2.5 kg

5.0 kg

3.0 kg

6.0 kg

6.0 kg

v1
1.5 m/s

v2

ptotal

AFTER COLLISION

v1

v2

0 kgm/s
-1.0 m/s

2.0 m/s

0.0 m/s

2.0 m/s

-1.0 m/s

0 kgm/s

8.0 kgm/s

4. Two objects with the same mass move toward each other with the same speed and experience an elastic
collision. Compare the final velocities of each object to their initial velocities.

5. A less-massive moving object has an elastic collision with a more-massive object that is not moving.
Compare the initial velocity (speed and direction) of the less-massive object to its final velocity.

INELASTIC Collisions

1. What defines a collision as being inelastic?

2. Make a hypothesis about initial and final momentums before playing with the sim.

3. Simulate the four inelastic collisions below. Complete the table using math formulas and the simulation.

BEFORE COLLISION

#
1

m1
2.0 kg

m2
2.0 kg

v1
1.5 m/s

v2
0

3.0 kg

6.0 kg

1.5 m/s

-0.75 m/s

1.5 kg

5.0 kg

2.0 m/s

0.2 m/s

10.0 kg

2.0 m/s

-1.0 m/s

ptotal

AFTER COLLISION

v1 and v2

10.0 kgm/s

4. Two objects moving toward each other with different momentums experience an inelastic collision. In
which direction will both objects travel after the collision?

5. A less-massive object is moving in the same direction as a more-massive object, but with a higher speed.
They experience an inelastic collision. Describe the speed of the more-massive object after the collision.

6. Objects 1 has half the mass of object 2 and the objects move toward each other and experience an
inelastic collision. If both objects do not move after the collision compare the velocity of both objects
before the collision.

7. Show mathematically the total momentum before the collision in trial #1 is conserved after the collision.

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