M8 Momentum Impulse and Collisions
M8 Momentum Impulse and Collisions
M8 Momentum Impulse and Collisions
Department of Education
Region VI – Western Visayas
Schools Division of Iloilo
BALASAN NATIONAL HIGH SCHOOL
Balasan, Iloilo
GENERAL PHYSICS 1
(VIII. MOMENTUM, IMPULSE AND COLLISIONS
WORK, ENERGY AND POWER)
Grade Level: 12
Specialized Subject for STEM
First Semester (Week 8)
Learning Competencies;
1. Relate the momentum, impulse, force, and time of contact in a system
2. Compare and contrast elastic and inelastic collisions,
3. Apply the concept of restitution coefficient in collisions
4. Solve problems involving impulse and momentum.
5. Determine the work done by a force acting on a system
6. Relate the gravitational potential energy of a system or object to the
configuration of the system
7. Relate the elastic potential energy of a system or object to the
configuration of the system
2
I. INTRODUCTION - This section will give you a background and an overview of the
lesson.
II. LEARNING COMPETENCIES - these are the target objectives that you will be able to
know after completing the lessons in the module.
II.a. Materials – list the needed things if there are any.
III. KEYWORDS- these provide the definitions of important or foreign words which
might not be familiar to you.
IV. REVIEW - this section will measure what learnings and skills have you understand
from the previous lessons.
V. PRE-ACTIVITY- this is a short activity or questions which will also serve as a
springboard or motivation for the new topic to be discussed.
VI. CONTENT LECTURES (WITH EXERCISES) – these contain the important concepts
which you must learn, with examples and exercises, answer the questions and
exercises with this symbol (copy the title first of the topic/exercise and
answer these in your answer sheet - for you to practice and apply if you have
grasped the lesson.
VII. ASSESSMENT – this will test what you have learned in the lesson.
ANSWER THIS INDEPENDENTLY AND HONESTLY.
VIII. SUMMARY AND REFLECTION – you will be the one who will summarize the
lesson. This will help you to remember what you have learned in this module, write
this in your notebook which your subject teacher will check later.
IX. ENRICHMENT – this is additional task, notes or information that you can use.
X. REFERENCES – list the different books or websites used by your teacher in doing
this module
3
I. INTRODUCTION:
In a basketball game, you say a player has momentum when he is doing very
well in the game. How do you know that a player plays actively, moves fast and is
always sure of his actions.
On the other hand, to do work, one must have a source of energy. Long ago
people’s only source of energy for the work they did was food, for they worked with
their muscles. Later they learned to harness the energy of animals to aid them in
doing work. To improve the quality and quantity of work, they invented machines
to carry out numerous tasks. With machines, the world has become highly
industrialized. But because machines, like humans cannot work without energy, the
demand for the cost of energy has increased. The importation of energy is one of
the causes of economic problems of our country today.
Modern industrial society is highly dependent on energy which our country
must import. Work and energy are basic to life on earth. This chapter will be
concerned with energy, mechanical work and the rate at which the work is done
which is also known as power.
III. KEYWORDS
Impulse is also the product of the force acting on a moving object and the
time interval during which the force acts.
Joule – the unit used for work or energy which is also equal to N.m , it is
named after James Joule.
Momentum (p) –depends on both mass and velocity, the linear momentum
of an object is defined as the product of its mass and velocity.
Power is the rate of doing work
Work-is the product of the force and the displacement resulting from
application of force.
IV. REVIEW
V. PRE-ACTIVITY
TRY THIS!
Get 2 identical marbles, then put one marble in a level surface and then flick
the other marble using your fingers towards the other then observe and answer this
question;
What happened to the identical marbles when you flicked one to the other?
moving to the left has a negative momentum. The unit of momentum is expressed
𝒎 𝒄𝒎
in kg. 𝒔 or g. .
𝒔
Examples:
𝒎
1. What is the momentum of a 2.0 x 104 kg truck traveling 25 𝒔 to the right?
Given: m = 2.0 x 104 kg
𝒎
v = 25 Find: p = ?
𝒔
Sol’n: p = mv
𝑚
= (2.0 x 104kg ) 25
𝑠
𝒎
p = 500,000 kg
𝒔
𝒄𝒎
2. What is the momentum in g of a 30-g body moving to the right at a
𝒔
𝒎
velocity of 2.0 ?
𝒔
Given: m = 30 g
𝒎 100𝑐𝑚 𝒄𝒎
v = 2.0 x = 200 Find: p = ?
𝒔 1𝑚 𝒔
Sol’n: p = mv
𝑚
= ( 30g) 200
𝑠
𝒎
p = 6000 g 𝒔
IMPULSE
A change in momentum occurs when there is a change in the mass of an
object, a change in velocity, or both.
We know from Newton’s second law that a net force produces acceleration.
The greater the force that acts on an object, the greater is the change in velocity,
and hence the greater the change in momentum. Acceleration is given by the
𝒗𝒇 −𝒗𝒊
equation a=
𝒕
Substituting this equation into Newton’s second law, F = ma,
𝒗𝒇 −𝒗𝒊
F =m ( )
𝒕
Ft = mvf - mvi
Impulse Iis equal to the change in momentum (Δp). In symbols: I =Δp
Impulse is also the product of the force acting on a moving object and the time
interval during which the force acts.
I = Ft
A maximum impulse is achieved if both the force applied to an object and the
time during which the force is applied are maximized. In a collision, the impulse is
greater if massive bodies moving at very high speeds suddenly stop. The impact
force F is tremendous if the change in momentum takes place in a very short time
interval.
Sample Problems:
1. What is the magnitude of the force that acts for 2.0 s and changes the
𝒎
momentum of a body by 40kg. 𝒔 ?
Given: t = 2.0 s Find: F = ?
𝒎
I = 40 kg. (since I =Δp)
𝒔
6
𝒎
Sol’n: I = Ft Recall: 1 Newton (N)= 1 kg.
𝒔²
t t
𝒎
𝑰 𝟒𝟎𝐤𝐠. 𝒎
𝒔
F= = = 20 kg. or 20 N
𝒕 𝟐.𝟎𝒔 𝒔²
2. A person in a sled, with a total mass of 125 kg, slides down a grassy hill and
𝒎
reach a speed of 8.0 𝒔 at the bottom. If a pile of grass can exert a constant force of
250 N, how fast will the sled stop?
Given: m = 125 kg
𝒎
v = 8.0 Find: t
𝒔
F = 250 N
Sol’n: Ft = mv
F F
𝒎𝒗
t=
𝑭
𝒎
= 125 kg (8 )
𝒔
250 N
𝒎
= 1000 𝐤𝐠.
𝒔
𝒎
250 N or kg
𝒔²
t = 4.0 s
l
EXERCISES for Momentum and Impulse (write the given, unknown formula and
encircle your final answer with unit).
1. A 2000-kg jeepney and a 4000-kg truck are both moving at a speed of 72
𝒌𝒎
toward the east. Calculate the momentum of each vehicle.
𝒉
2. What is the velocity of a shot put with a mass of 0.3 kg and momentum of
22 kg m/s moving in the forward direction? (Ans: v=73.33 m/s)
𝒎
3. Charles hits a 0.05-kg golf ball, giving it a speed of 70 . What impulse does
𝒔
he impart to the ball?
CONSERVATION OF MOMENTUM
In a collision, energy is not always conserved, unless the collision is fully
elastic (all stored energy is turned into kinetic energy, none is turned into heat,
noise or damage), but all collisions have to conserve momentum if there is no net
applied force. Σp before collision= Σp after collision
∑ (Greek letter Sigma) – means total or sum of.
When watching Superman, Lois Lane always gets into
trouble, and one consequence is her falling down a building. But
Superman, always alert, catches her. But watch how he catches
her. What is the proper way to do it?
cushioning the impact → greater Δt → lesser F
(Just like catching eggs)
Consider a system of objects that interact with each other, for example
two identical marbles on a table. If you hit marble 2 with marble 1, they exert
7
forces on each other. Newton’s law of interaction says that these internal forces
are equal and opposite in direction. In symbols; F1 = -F2
Where;
F1 = force exerted by marble 1 on marble 2
-F2 = force exerted by marble 2 on marble 1 (negative sign indicates
opposite direction)
Following the collision, marble 1 comes
to rest and marble 2 moves with exactly the
same velocity and direction that marble1 had
before the collision. It was observed that the Marble 1 marble 2
momentum of marble 1 is transferred to marble 2 during the collision. This
simple statement on motion of the marbles has been expanded to a more
general one which became known as the “Law of Conservation of Momentum”
– which states that the total momentum p in an isolated system is constant.
An isolated system refers to one on which no external force is acting. The
only forces present in the system are those between the interacting objects. In
all collisions that were studied, the law of conservation of momentum has been
found to apply.
In the example given above, the total momentum of the two marbles
before and after collision are equal. The momentum of each marble before
collision is:
p1 (momentum of marble 1) = m1v1
p2 (momentum of marble 2) = m2v2
total momentum before collision (Σp) = p1 + p2
Σp = m1v1 + m2v2
total momentum after collision (denoted by an apostrophe (‘ ) read as “prime”)
Σp’ = p1’ + p2’
Σp’= m1v1’ + m2v2’ (mass is still the same, only the v changes)
Applying the law of conservation of momentum for this system, it can be
stated that:
Total momentum before collision is equal to the total momentum after
collision. This statement can also be expressed as:
Σp = Σp’
p1 + p2 = p 1 ’ + p 2 ’
m1v1+ m2v2 = m1v1’ + m2v2’
where; m1= mass of object 1
v1 = velocity of object 1 before collision
m2= mass of object 2
v2 = velocity of object 2 before collision
v1’ = velocity of object 1 after collision
v2’ = velocity of object 2 after collision
Example:
1.) A marble of mass m1= 0.04 kg, moving with a speed v1 = 2.0 m/s
strikes a second marble, initially at rest, of mass m2= 0.04 kg. As a result of the
collision, the first ball comes to rest and the second ball moves in the opposite
direction. What is the velocity of marble 2?
Given:
m1= 0.04 kg m2= 0.04kg
v1 = 2.0 m/s v2= 0 (initially at rest)
8
F F
θ θ
F cos θ F cos θ
X
And so the work done is W = Fx dx = (F cos θ) dx
But if F is perpendicular to d, θ=900, and cos θ = 0, so in this case W = 0.
𝒎²
h = 4.0 x 104 kg
𝒔²
𝒎
60 kg ( 9.8 )
𝒔²
𝒎²
= 4.0 x 104 kg
𝒔²
𝒎
588 kg
𝒔²
h = 68.03 m
2. Niel pulls a toy 3.0 m across the floor by a string, applying a force of 0.50
N. During the first meter, the string is parallel to the floor, in the next two meters,
the string makes an angle of 250 with the horizontal direction. What is the total
amount of work done by Niel on the toy?
Given: d1 = 1.0 m d2 = 2.0 m
F = 0.5N
Θ = 250
Find: W1 = F d W2 = F d cos Θ
= 0.5N (1.0m) = 0.5N (2.0m) cos 25
W1 = 0.5 N.m or J = 1.0N.m (0.9063)
W2 = 0.91N.m
WT = W1+ W2
= 0.5 J+ 0.91 N.m
WT = 1.41 J
POWER
How do you feel after running upstairs in a few seconds? How about after
walking slowly upstairs for a few minutes?
When you walk up a flight of stairs, you do work
because you are lifting your body up the stairs. You do
the same amount of work whether you walk or run. The
work done is the same in either case because the net
result is that you lifted up the same weight to the same
height. But you know that if you ran up the stairs you
would be more tired than if you walked up. To
understand this difference, you need to know how fast the work is done.
Power is the rate of doing work.
𝒘𝒐𝒓𝒌 𝒅𝒐𝒏𝒆 𝑾
Power = or P=
𝒕𝒊𝒎𝒆 𝒕
When you go up the stairs fast. You expend more energy in a shorter time
than when you go slowly.
𝙹
Power is measured in joules per second or watts W. Aside from these,
𝒔
other related units are used.
𝙹
1 joule per second ( ) = 1 watt (W)
𝒔
12
1000 W = 1 kW
1 horsepower (hp) = 746 watts
1 kilowatt-hour = 1 KWh = 3.60 x 106 J = 3.60 MJ
The unit of power, watt (W), was named after the Scottish mathematician
and engineer James Watt – the man who greatly improved the steam engine
developed in 1712.
Although horsepower is not an SI unit, it
is often used in measuring the power of
engines, it is widely used in to express the
power of large machines. The earliest use of
steam engine was to pump water from mines,
this work had previously been done by horses,
so the power of any give engine was estimated
as equal to that of so many horses.
Sample Problem:
a.) Arnaldo climbs a flight of stairs in 1.5 min. If he weighs 450 N and the
stairs is10 m from the ground, how much power will he develop?
Given: t = 1.5 min = 90 s
F = 450 N
d = 10 m
Find: P
Solution:
𝑾 𝑭• 𝒅 (𝟒𝟓𝟎𝑵)(𝟏𝟎𝒎) 𝑱
P= = = = 50 or 50 W
𝒕 𝒕 𝟗𝟎 𝒔 𝒔
EXERCISES for Work and Power (Copy and answer the following questions).
1. Put a dot (•) before the item if work is done to an object or person.
( ) a boy running across the playground
( ) a mother dancing with her baby in her arms
( ) a basket being lifted
( ) a person in an ascending elevator
( ) a stone whirled around a horizontal circle
( ) a big box dragged across the floor
( ) a girl walking up the stairs
2. Complete the table to show some typical work values for different tasks.
ENERGY
Energy is the property that gives something the capacity to do work.
When we say that something has energy, we mean it is able (directly or
indirectly) to exert a force on something else and do work on it. On the other hand,
when we do work on something, we add to it an amount of energy equal to the
work done. The unit of energy is the same as the unit of work, the joule (J).
There are three broad categories of energy:
1. Kinetic energy, the energy something possesses by virtue of its motion.
2. Potential energy, the energy something possesses by virtue of its position.
3. Rest energy, the energy something possesses by virtue of its mass.
In these descriptions the word something was used instead of object because
such nonmaterial entities as force fields and massless particles may also possess
energy.
Kinetic Energy: The energy of motion.
Anything that is moving has kinetic energy (KE). A ball that is thrown leaves
the thrower’s hand with a certain velocity and gains kinetic energy as velocity
increases. The kinetic energy depends on the mass and speed of the body. Thus,
𝟏
KE = 𝟐 mv2.
This equation reveals that the kinetic energy of an object is directly
proportional to the square of its speed. This means that if the speed of an object is
doubled, its kinetic energy is increased by a factor of four which also means that it
takes four times the work to double the speed. Similarly, it takes four times the
work to stop an object moving twice as fast.
Sample Problem:
“Pag binato ka ng tinapay, dapat cheeseburger!” If you throw a cheeseburger
𝑚
deluxe weighing 0.1 kg at 10 , how much kinetic energy have you given it?
𝑠
Given: m = 0.1 kg
𝑚
v = 10 Find: KE
𝑠
𝟏
Solution: KE = 𝟐 mv2
1 𝑚
= (0.1 kg) (10 )2
2 𝑠
𝑚²
= (0.05 kg) 100
𝑠²
𝑚2
KE = 5.0 kg =5 N-m or 5.0 J
𝑠2
You gave that cheeseburger 5 joules of energy by throwing it. Now, if
someone’s going to eat the cheeseburger, then he will gain energy.
PEg = mgh
In calculating gravitational potential energy, it is the height lifted against
gravity that matters, not the actual distance moved. The amount of gravitational
potential energy an object has is a relative quantity. Its value depends on how we
define the height, that is, what height we take as the zero value.
When you throw a ball straight up, some of the chemical energy stored in
your body is transferred to the ball as kinetic energy. As the ball rises up, it loses
kinetic energy and gains potential energy. At the highest point, the ball is
momentarily at rest. All of its kinetic energy changes into potential energy. As the
ball falls to the ground, potential energy is changed back into kinetic energy. Then,
as the ball is brought to rest by the ground, its kinetic energy is changed into
internal (heat) energy and sound energy.
(The figure shows the increase in potential energy is equal to the decrease in kinetic
energy.The total amount of energy remains the same after the interaction).
The sum of the kinetic and potential energies of the system is called
mechanical energy.
In a conservative system, the total mechanical energy is constant. In this
system, only conservative forces (a force is said to be conservative if the total work
done in moving an object from an initial to a final position is zero) are present and,
therefore, a decrease in potential energy is equal to an increase in kinetic energy,
and vice versa.
This is now expressed in the law called the law of conservation of mechanical
energy which states that:
The sum of the kinetic energy and potential energy in a conservative
system is constant and equal to the total mechanical energy of the
system.
In symbols, TE = PE + KE, where TE is the total energy.
In an isolated system where there are no mechanical energy losses due to
friction, ΔKE = ΔPE
This means that all the kinetic energy and potential energy before an
interaction equal all the kinetic energy and potential energy after interaction.
Sample Problem:
A 50-kg box falls from a bridge and lands in the water 20 m below. Find its
(a) initial PE
(b) maximum KE
(c) KE and PE 15 m above the water, and
(d) velocity upon reaching the water.
Solution:
(a) Initial PE is taken from the top. Therefore,
PEi = mgh
𝑚
= (50kg) (9.8 ) (20 m)
𝑠2
PEi = 9 800 J
(b) The maximum KE is equal to the total PE at the top. Therefore,
KEmax = 9800 J
(c) At the height 15 m above the water,
PE = mgh
𝑚
= (50 kg)(9.8 2) (15 m)
𝑠
PE = 7350 J
The KE can be solved by using the law of conservation of mechanical energy.
TE = PE + KE
Therefore,
KE = TE – PE
= 9800 J – 7350 J
KE = 2450 J
Take note that the total energy is 9800 J since, at the top, PE is maximum and
KE is zero. So,
TE = 9 800 J + 0 = 9800 J
And, conversely, upon reaching the water, KE is maximum and PE is zero.
VII. ASSESSMENT
After Collision:
(d) Does Kian’s speed increase or decrease?
(e) Does Kyro’s speed increase or decrease?
(f) What is the total mass of the boys?
(g) What is the total momentum of the boys?
(h) What is the new speed of both boys after collision?
m1v1 + m2v2 = (m1+ m2) v2’ – since they moved as one after the collision
WORK, POWER AND ENERGY
1. A porter pulls a 10-kg luggage along a level road for 5.0 m by exerting a
force of20 N at an angle of 300, with the horizontal shoulder through a vertical
distance of 1.5 m and carries it for another 5.0 m. How much work does he do in (a)
pulling, (b) lifting and(c) carrying the luggage on his shoulder?
2. An electric motor develops 65 kW of power as it lifts a loaded elevator 17.5
m in 35 s. How much force does the motor exert? ( Note: W= Pt, F= W/d)
3. In 1932 five members of the Polish Olympic ski team climbed from the 5th
to the 102nd floor of the Empire State Building, a distance approximately 350 m, in
21 min. If one of these men had a mass of 70 kg, how much power did he develop
during the ascent? (Convert 21 minutes first into seconds and recall W = PE= mgh ).
𝑚
4. A bullet moving at 500 𝑠 has a KE of 2500 J and a PE of 0.50 J at a certain
moment. What is the bullet’s mass and how high above the ground is it at that
moment? (Ans: m= 0.02kg)
Write a summary of what have you learned in this module in your notebook.
19
The collision
X. ENRICHMENT
Simple Machines
A machine is a device that transmits force or torque for a definite purpose.
All machines, however complicated, are actually combinations of only three basic
machines: the lever, the inclined plane, and the hydraulic press. Thus the train of
gears that carries power from the engine of a car to its wheels is a development of
the lever; the screw jack that can raise one end of the car from the ground is a
development of an inclined plane; and the brake system that permits a touch of the
foot to stop the car is the development of the hydraulic press.
The Actual Mechanical Advantage (AMA) of a machine is the ratio between
the output force Fout it exerts and the input force Fin that is furnished to it.
𝒐𝒖𝒕𝒑𝒖𝒕 𝒇𝒐𝒓𝒄𝒆
Actual Mechanical Advantage =
𝒊𝒏𝒑𝒖𝒕 𝒇𝒐𝒓𝒄𝒆
𝑭𝒐𝒖𝒕
AMA =
𝑭𝒊𝒏
When AMA > 1, means that the output force exceeds the input force.
When AMA < 1, means that the output force is smaller than the input force.
Usually the AMA is greater than 1, which makes it possible for a relatively
small applied force to accomplish a task ordinarily beyond its capacity. However,
sometimes an AMA less than 1 is useful. An example is a pair of scissors, where the
range of motion is increased at the expense of a reduced force.
The Ideal Mechanical Advantage (IMA) of a machine is its mechanical
advantage under ideal conditions. The AMA, on the other hand, takes into account
friction and any other dissipative factors that may be acting. Because these factors
can never be entirely eliminated, the AMA of every machine is less than its IMA.
The ratio of the distances is the inverse of the ratio of the forces. The effect
of friction is always to increase the input force Fin needed to produce a given output
𝑺𝒊𝒏 𝑺𝒊𝒏
force Fout, but the distance ratio does not change. Hence we can use to
𝑺𝒐𝒖𝒕 𝑺𝒐𝒖𝒕
define IMA.
𝑭𝒐𝒖𝒕 𝑺
= 𝑺 𝒊𝒏
𝑭𝒊𝒏 𝒐𝒖𝒕
𝑖𝑛𝑝𝑢𝑡 𝑑𝑖𝑠𝑡𝑎𝑛𝑐𝑒
Ideal Mechanical Advantage =
𝑜𝑢𝑡𝑝𝑢𝑡 𝑑𝑖𝑠𝑡𝑎𝑛𝑐𝑒
𝑺𝒊𝒏
IMA =
𝑺𝒐𝒖𝒕
The efficiency of the machine is equal to the ratio of its actual and ideal
mechanical advantages.
𝑨𝑴𝑨
Efficiency = x 100%
𝑰𝑴𝑨
In some machines, such as the lever, the efficiency may be very close to
100%, whereas in others, such as the screw jack, it may be 10% or less.
20
XI. REFERENCES:
Prepared by: