35
Impulse & Momentum

Impulse & Momentum. 2 of 42 Have you ever wondered… Why golfers and bowlers “follow through”? Why skydivers bend their knees upon impact? Why falling

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Impulse & Momentum. 2 of 42 Have you ever wondered… Why golfers and bowlers “follow through”? Why skydivers bend their knees upon impact? Why falling

Impulse & Momentum

Page 2: Impulse & Momentum. 2 of 42 Have you ever wondered… Why golfers and bowlers “follow through”? Why skydivers bend their knees upon impact? Why falling

2of42

Have you ever wondered…

Why golfers and bowlers “follow through”? Why skydivers bend their knees upon

impact? Why falling on a wood floor (or into a

swimming pool) hurts less than falling on a cement one?

Page 3: Impulse & Momentum. 2 of 42 Have you ever wondered… Why golfers and bowlers “follow through”? Why skydivers bend their knees upon impact? Why falling

3of42

Have you ever wondered…

What’s the best strategy to win a “water balloon toss” or an “egg toss”?

Why we make auto air bags and padded dash boards?

How the police can figure out how fast you were going BEFORE an accident by measuring your skid marks?

Page 4: Impulse & Momentum. 2 of 42 Have you ever wondered… Why golfers and bowlers “follow through”? Why skydivers bend their knees upon impact? Why falling

4of42

Impulse and Momentum

To answer all of these questions--you need to understand: ImpulseImpulse and MomentumMomentum

Recall, Newton’s first law…The Law of Inertia The study of inertia for moving objects is the

study of “momentum”

Page 5: Impulse & Momentum. 2 of 42 Have you ever wondered… Why golfers and bowlers “follow through”? Why skydivers bend their knees upon impact? Why falling

5of42

Consider the following:

When a baseball bat hits a baseball, a force is applied OVER A SHORT PERIOD OF TIME.

Page 6: Impulse & Momentum. 2 of 42 Have you ever wondered… Why golfers and bowlers “follow through”? Why skydivers bend their knees upon impact? Why falling

6of42

Impulse

Defn: A force applied over a period of time is called an IMPULSE.

What are the SI units of Impulse?

I F t

Page 7: Impulse & Momentum. 2 of 42 Have you ever wondered… Why golfers and bowlers “follow through”? Why skydivers bend their knees upon impact? Why falling

7of42

Example - Impulse

A batter hits a 500g ball with a force of 200N. If the time of contact was 0.205 seconds, find the impulse of the ball.

I F t

I 200N 0.205sec

I 41N sec

Page 8: Impulse & Momentum. 2 of 42 Have you ever wondered… Why golfers and bowlers “follow through”? Why skydivers bend their knees upon impact? Why falling

8of42

Example #2

A batter hits a 500g ball with a force of 500N. If the time of contact was 0.205 seconds, find the impulse of the ball.

I F ta) 0 N·sb) 102.5 N·s c) 51250 N·sd) 250000 N·se) I have no clue…

Page 9: Impulse & Momentum. 2 of 42 Have you ever wondered… Why golfers and bowlers “follow through”? Why skydivers bend their knees upon impact? Why falling

9of42

Example #3

A batter hits a 500g ball with a force of 500N. If the impulse is 75 N·s, then what is the contact time between the ball & bat?

a) 0 secb) 0.150 sec c) 75 secd) 37500 sece) I have no clue…

I F t

Page 10: Impulse & Momentum. 2 of 42 Have you ever wondered… Why golfers and bowlers “follow through”? Why skydivers bend their knees upon impact? Why falling

10of42

Answer: (b)

A batter hits a 500g ball with a force of 500N. If the impulse is 75 N·s, then what is the contact time between the ball & bat?

I Ft

t =I

F

t =75 N sec

500 Nt = 0.150 sec

Page 11: Impulse & Momentum. 2 of 42 Have you ever wondered… Why golfers and bowlers “follow through”? Why skydivers bend their knees upon impact? Why falling

11of42

Example #4

A batter hits a 500g ball and the impulse given to the ball is 125 N·s. If the ball & bat are in contact for 200 milli-seconds, then what is the force of the bat?

a) 0 Nb) 0.625 N c) 2.5 Nd) 625 Ne) I have no clue…

I F t

Page 12: Impulse & Momentum. 2 of 42 Have you ever wondered… Why golfers and bowlers “follow through”? Why skydivers bend their knees upon impact? Why falling

12of42

Back to baseball...Which will have the greater speed afterward?

A large or a small ball? A fast or a slow ball? A large or a small bat? A fast or a slow swing?

Page 13: Impulse & Momentum. 2 of 42 Have you ever wondered… Why golfers and bowlers “follow through”? Why skydivers bend their knees upon impact? Why falling

13of42

Momentum

Defn: The MOMENTUM of a body is equal to the product of its mass and its velocity.

Is momentum a vector or a scalar? What are the SI units of momentum?

p m

v

Page 14: Impulse & Momentum. 2 of 42 Have you ever wondered… Why golfers and bowlers “follow through”? Why skydivers bend their knees upon impact? Why falling

14of42

Determine the following momentums…

Ex #1 - A 1200lb car moving at 60mph Ex #2 - A 5.0g bullet moving at 900m/s Ex #3 - A 3 ton elephant sitting still Ex #4 - A 150g hummingbird flying at 40mph

– ALL answers need to be in kg m/s

1 lb = 0.454 kg; 1 mph = 0.447 m/s

Page 15: Impulse & Momentum. 2 of 42 Have you ever wondered… Why golfers and bowlers “follow through”? Why skydivers bend their knees upon impact? Why falling

15of42

Determine the following momentums…Solution

Ex #1 - A 1200lb car moving at 60mph = 14599.7 kg m /s

Ex #2 - A 5.0g bullet moving at 900m/s = 4.5 kg m/s

Ex #3 - A 3 ton elephant sitting still = 0 kg m/s

Ex #4 - A 150g hummingbird flying at 40mph = 2.68 kg m/s

Page 16: Impulse & Momentum. 2 of 42 Have you ever wondered… Why golfers and bowlers “follow through”? Why skydivers bend their knees upon impact? Why falling

16of42

Example #5

A boy standing at one end of a floating raft that is stationary relative to the shore walks to the opposite end of the raft, away from the shore. As a consequence, the raft.

(a) remains stationary,

(b) moves away from the shore,

(c) moves toward the shore

(d) Not enough information given

Page 17: Impulse & Momentum. 2 of 42 Have you ever wondered… Why golfers and bowlers “follow through”? Why skydivers bend their knees upon impact? Why falling

17of42

Answer: (c)

A boy standing at one end of a floating raft that is stationary relative to the shore walks to the opposite end of the raft, away from the shore. As a consequence, the raft.

Answer: (c) moves toward the shore - Newton’s 3 law

Page 18: Impulse & Momentum. 2 of 42 Have you ever wondered… Why golfers and bowlers “follow through”? Why skydivers bend their knees upon impact? Why falling

18of42

Example #6

Which has a greater momentum, a heavy truck at rest or a moving skateboard?

(a) Heavy truck,

(b) Skateboard,

(c) Neither (same momentum)

(d) Not enough information given

Page 19: Impulse & Momentum. 2 of 42 Have you ever wondered… Why golfers and bowlers “follow through”? Why skydivers bend their knees upon impact? Why falling

19of42

Answer: (b)

Which has a greater momentum, a heavy truck at rest or a moving skateboard?

Answer: (b) The truck at rest has no speed, hence no momentum. So the moving skateboard has greater momentum.

Page 20: Impulse & Momentum. 2 of 42 Have you ever wondered… Why golfers and bowlers “follow through”? Why skydivers bend their knees upon impact? Why falling

20of42

Making the Connection:

Look at the units of Impulse and Momentum…Do you notice anything?

Recall, F = m·a…can you rearrange the equation to say something about Impulse or Momentum?

Page 21: Impulse & Momentum. 2 of 42 Have you ever wondered… Why golfers and bowlers “follow through”? Why skydivers bend their knees upon impact? Why falling

21of42

The Impulse-Momentum Theorem

When a net force acts upon a body for a period of time, the Impulse applied by the force is equal to the body’s change in Momentum!

F t m

v m(

v f

v 0)

Page 22: Impulse & Momentum. 2 of 42 Have you ever wondered… Why golfers and bowlers “follow through”? Why skydivers bend their knees upon impact? Why falling

22of42

Impulse-Momentum Theorem #1:

If your Force is limited, how can you MAXIMIZE the impulse you apply?

By increasing the time of contact! Golfing…Baseball…

Page 23: Impulse & Momentum. 2 of 42 Have you ever wondered… Why golfers and bowlers “follow through”? Why skydivers bend their knees upon impact? Why falling

23of42

Impulse-Momentum Theorem #2

If your change in momentum is constant, how can you MINIMIZE the force applied to you?

By increasing the time of contact! Bending knees upon impact, rolling with the

punches, crumple zones, running shoes, air bags…

Page 24: Impulse & Momentum. 2 of 42 Have you ever wondered… Why golfers and bowlers “follow through”? Why skydivers bend their knees upon impact? Why falling

24of42

Momentum Changes and Bouncing

Is it more dangerous when a flower pot falls on your head and breaks or stays in one piece and bounces back up?

When an object bounces, what happens to it’s velocity? How does that effect it’s change of momentum?

Since ∆p is greater in bouncing situations, the Impulse applied will be greater!

Page 25: Impulse & Momentum. 2 of 42 Have you ever wondered… Why golfers and bowlers “follow through”? Why skydivers bend their knees upon impact? Why falling

25of42

The Law of Conservation of Momentum

Internal forces are forces that act within a system, external forces are forces that act on a system from outside…

If a system is not affected by any net external force, it is said to be “ISOLATED”.

In an isolated system, the total linear momentum is always conserved!

Page 26: Impulse & Momentum. 2 of 42 Have you ever wondered… Why golfers and bowlers “follow through”? Why skydivers bend their knees upon impact? Why falling

26of42

Example - Recoil

A hunter shoots a 0.22 rifle and the 3.0 kg gun recoils with a speed of 0.042 m/s. If the bullet has a mass of 0.5 g, find the muzzle speed of the gun.

Page 27: Impulse & Momentum. 2 of 42 Have you ever wondered… Why golfers and bowlers “follow through”? Why skydivers bend their knees upon impact? Why falling

27of42

Example - Recoil ~ Answer

(P)before (P)after

Prifle Pbullet before Prifle Pbullet after

mV rifle mV bullet

before mV rifle

mV bullet after

3000g0ms 0.5g0m

s 3000g 0.042ms 0.5gV m

s 0 126

gmsec

0.5V

126gmsec

0.5V

V 252m

s564mph

Page 28: Impulse & Momentum. 2 of 42 Have you ever wondered… Why golfers and bowlers “follow through”? Why skydivers bend their knees upon impact? Why falling

28of42

Example #7

Jocko, who has a mass of 60kg and stands at rest on ice, catches a 20kg ball that is thrown to him at 10km/h. How fast do Jocko and the ball move across the ice?

(a) 0 km/hr (b) 2.5 km/hr (c) 200 km/hr (d) no way to determine

Page 29: Impulse & Momentum. 2 of 42 Have you ever wondered… Why golfers and bowlers “follow through”? Why skydivers bend their knees upon impact? Why falling

29of42

Answer: (b)

(b): The momentum before the catch is all in the ball, 20kg x 10km/h = 200kg·km/h. This is also the momentum after the catch, where the moving mass is 80kg—60kg for Jocko and 20kg for the caught ball.

80kg x v = 200kg·km/h v = 200kg·km/h/80kg = 2.5km/h

Page 30: Impulse & Momentum. 2 of 42 Have you ever wondered… Why golfers and bowlers “follow through”? Why skydivers bend their knees upon impact? Why falling

30of42

Answer: (b)

(P)before (P)after

Pball PJocko before Pball PJocko after

mV ball mV Jocko

before mV ball

mV Jocko after

20kg10kmhr 60kg0km

hr 80kgV kmhr

200kgkm

hr80kgV km

hr

V 200kgkm

hr

1

80kg

V 2.5kmhr

Page 31: Impulse & Momentum. 2 of 42 Have you ever wondered… Why golfers and bowlers “follow through”? Why skydivers bend their knees upon impact? Why falling

31of42

Example #8

Which would be more damaging:

(a)Driving into a massive concrete wall(b)Driving at the same speed into a head-on

collision with an identical car traveling toward you at the same speed

(c)Neither - the same amount of damage(d)Not enough information given

Page 32: Impulse & Momentum. 2 of 42 Have you ever wondered… Why golfers and bowlers “follow through”? Why skydivers bend their knees upon impact? Why falling

32of42

Answer: (c)

(c): Both cases are equivalent, because either way, your car rapidly decelerates to a dead stop. The dead stop is easy to see when hitting the wall, and identical cars at equal speeds means equal momenta—zero before, zero after collision.

Page 33: Impulse & Momentum. 2 of 42 Have you ever wondered… Why golfers and bowlers “follow through”? Why skydivers bend their knees upon impact? Why falling

33of42

Example #9

Strictly speaking, when a gun is fired, compared with the momentum of the recoiling gun, the opposite momentum of the bullet is

(a) less

(b) more

(c) the same

(d) no way to determine

(Neglect the effect of the hand.)

Page 34: Impulse & Momentum. 2 of 42 Have you ever wondered… Why golfers and bowlers “follow through”? Why skydivers bend their knees upon impact? Why falling

34of42

Answer: (a)

(a) Why? Because more than just a bullet comes out of the barrel when a gun is fired. The gas, formed when the powder in the cartridge burns, pushes the bullet along the barrel and this gas too has appreciable mass and exits at high speed. So, Momentum of recoiling gun = momentum of bullet + momentum of gases.

Page 35: Impulse & Momentum. 2 of 42 Have you ever wondered… Why golfers and bowlers “follow through”? Why skydivers bend their knees upon impact? Why falling

The End...