Collision Lab Guide
Collision Lab Guide
too small to see, a dark circle appears on the ball. The circle
is grabbable to change the
velocity.
The balls location can be changed by grabbing the balls.
The Momentum graph is a display of the momentum. You cannot change the momentum vectors
using the graph, only by changing the mass or velocity.
Turning off Reflecting Borders enables students to focus on ball- ball collisions which do
conserve Momentum. Ball-wall collisions do not conserve momentum
Mechanical energy changes can be determined using the Kinetic Energy display.
Elasticity affects the ball-wall and ball-ball collisions.
You can Pause the sim and then use Step to incrementally analyze. The Back button only
functions for perfectly elastic collisions, so it is disabled if the elasticity is less than 100%.
If you are doing a lecture demonstration, set your screen resolution to 1024x768 so the simulation
will fill the screen and be seen easily.
Tip-to-Tail can be unchecked to enable more understanding about vectors
because the students can translate the vectors.
Written by Trish Loeblein, Mike Dubson, Mindy Gratny last updated Jun 2012
For Experts: Elasticity, a number between 0 and 1, indicates the amount of kinetic energy lost during
collisions. If the elasticity = 1, the collision is perfectly elastic, and kinetic energy is conserved.
Elasticity < 1 affects the magnitude of the component of the velocity along the line of action
between two colliding balls. The line of action is the line connecting the centers of the balls at the
moment of collision. If the elasticity is, say, 0.3, then the speed along the line of action after collision
is 0.3 of the value it would have had in an elastic collision. The speed perpendicular to the line of
action is not affected. Since these balls are non-rotating, changing the speed perpendicular to the line
of action would violate Conservation of Angular Momentum.
Written by Trish Loeblein, Mike Dubson, Mindy Gratny last updated Jun 2012