- #1
Helios12
- 1
- 0
Homework Statement
Two frictionless pucks are placed on a level surface with an initial distance of 20m. Puck 1 has a mass of 0.8 kg and a charge of + 3x10^-4 C while puck 2 has a mass of 0.4 kg and a charge of +3 x10^-4 C. The initial velocity of puck 1 is 12 m/s [E] and the initial velocity of puck 2 is 8 m/s [W]. Find the minimum separation of the two pucks (the minimum distance between the two pucks).
The Attempt at a Solution
This is my attempt at a solution
I first used the law of conservation of momentum to find the velocity of each mass at minimum separtion. The 2 masses have the same velocity at this point.
Note: [east] is positive
Pt=Pt'
m1v1+m2(-v2)=(m1+m2)v'
isolating for v'
v'=(0.80)(12)+(0.40)(-8)/0.80+0.40
v'=5.33 m/s [east]
Next i used the law of conservation of energy:
Ek=kinetic energy
Ee=electric potential energy
Ek1+Ek2=Ee+Ek'
1/2m1v1^2 + 1/2m2(-v2^2) = kq^2/r + 1/2(m1+m2)(v')^2
inserting each value
1/2(0.80)(12)^2 + 1/2(0.40)(-8)^2 = (9.0X10^9)(+3.0X10^-4)^2/r + 1/2(0.80+0.40)(5.33)^2
isolating for r (the distance) I get:
r=15.2 m
so the minimum distance between the 2 pucks is 15.2 m
Is this correct? I am not feeling too confident with my answer of 15.2 m it just seems too big a separation. If i made a mistake or forgot to include something or included something i shouldn't have. please let me know. Also I am not sure if i am correct in assuming that there is no electric potential energy when the pucks are 20 m apart. It seems that they are too far apart to have any electric potential energy between them. Can someone confirm this with me also?
It took me some time to write this up so can someone please look over my answer and the questions that i have. It would be most appreciated!