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Chapter 4 ISCI 2002

Momentum and Energy

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Momentum and Energy. Chapter 4 ISCI 2002. Momentum and Inertia. (1). Momentum is inertia in motion Momentum = mv (2). A heavy object in motion will have a great deal of momentum (3). Mass is constant ; momentum changes Change in velocity Acceleration occurs. Impulse. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Momentum and Energy

Chapter 4ISCI 2002

Page 2: Momentum and Energy

Momentum and Inertia• (1). Momentum is inertia in motion

– Momentum = mv

• (2). A heavy object in motion will have a great deal of momentum

• (3). Mass is constant; momentum changes – Change in velocity • Acceleration occurs

Page 3: Momentum and Energy

Impulse• (1). Force produces acceleration which

changes velocity (changes the momentum)– Time of force • Longer force applied, more change in momentum• Impulse = (F)(t)

• (2). Impulse-Momentum Relationship – Ft = (mv)• Net force applied over a period of time changes

momentum

Page 4: Momentum and Energy

Examples• (1). Why are cannons barrels so long?

– Applied force on ball is extended• Increased impulse, increased momentum ,

• (2). Your Choice: Hitting a wall or soft surface when driving a car? – Of course the soft surface• Relate momentum , impulse and impact

• When you hit a soft surface you extend time your momentum is brought to zero, extend impact which reduces force that will be incurred.

Page 5: Momentum and Energy

Conservation of Momentum(1). Mirrors Newton’s Third Law

As the cannonball gains momentum the cannon also gains momentum by recoiling Net momentum = zero

(2). If an object has momentumNo change unless affected by unbalance forceWhich Law?

Page 6: Momentum and Energy

Collisions and Momentum • (1). One object in motion – with a specific momentum hits

second object at rest– First object collides and stops– Second object moves with Vi of first ball – “elastic collision”– Momentum is transferred from one ball to another. “rebound”– Conservation of momentum

• (2). Object one collides with static object two– No rebound (freight cars) “inelastic” – Object one (moves 10 m/s) so

• (net mv)before = (net mv)after • (m x 10)b = (2m x v)a *2m refers to twice mass or two cars moving• V = 5 m/s (using the formula, velocity of object hit can be predicted)

Page 7: Momentum and Energy

Energy • (1). Impulse = (F)(t)

– (F)(d)? Force over a specific distance– Refers to energy – work

• (2). Energy – Sun, food, heat, etc.

• (3). Work = (F)(d)– When work is done energy is transferred to an

object – Unit of work = Nm or the joule (J)

Page 8: Momentum and Energy

Power(1). Work done/time interval

Measure or rate of how fast work is doneRate at which energy is changed from one form

to anotherUnit: watt

One watt = used when one joule of work is done in one second.

Page 9: Momentum and Energy

PE vs KE• (1). PE

– Stored energy – Chemical energy (fuels, glucose)

• Chemical changes occurs makes energy available – Can do work

• Gravitational PE– Work to elevate objects against gravity – GPE of an object raised = work done lifting against gravity – PE = mgh

• (2). KE– Object in motion or moving and energy involved

• Object hits another transfers energy • GPE of object transforms into KE when object is dropped • KE = ½ mv2

Page 10: Momentum and Energy

Work-Energy Theorem(1). Work = ΔKE

Or (F)(d) = ΔKEWork done on an object basically equals gain in

KE by that object Push on a box

it slides (you are doing work) It gains KE (moving)

Page 11: Momentum and Energy

KE vs Momentum (1). Properties of moving things but:

Momentum is a vector – movement in a directionKE is scalar – can never be cancelled (like mass)

Momentum depends on velocity (mv) KE depends on the square of velocity (1/2 mv2) Two objects with same mass

Object 1 moves with 2x velocity as object 2 Object 1 has 2x the momentum and 4x the KE

If a car travelling 2x velocity crashes, will crash with 4x more energy

Page 12: Momentum and Energy

Machines • (1). Machines

– Change direction of force• Lever – push on one end does work on load end (4.24)• Work input = work output

– Multiply forces• Fulcrum is close to load, small force input produces large output force

• (2). Examples of machines– Car jack – push it down 25 cm lifts car 0.25 cm

• Applies 100x the force – Pulley

• Pull on it (a little) multiplies force applied • Remember fD input = Fd output !• Car example

– She applies 50N x 25cm = 5000N x 0.25

• (3). Efficiency – Work done / energy used – 100J work done and 98J of productive work = 98% efficiency