- #36
mark2142
- 211
- 40
Thank you.
Right. So you stop saying that [a] momentum [component] has increased or decreased and say instead that the vector sum of the change on body 1 and the change on body 2 is the zero vector.Delta2 said:Yes it is not needed but we got to refer component wise then. Because if say initially the momentum of body 1 is in x-direction and after a collision it exchanges momentum with body 2 in an angle 45 degrees with the x-direction, then I am not sure what we ll mean by saying its momentum increased or decreased as its momentum now will make an an angle with the x-direction. Momentum is a vector quantity.
Its the exact same thing with different words whether you say momentum conserved or the vector sum is conserved. Neither momentum neither vector sum is necessarily conserved pairwise if you have more than 2 bodies.mark2142 said:Instead of saying that the momentum is conserved pairwise why not say the vector sum is conserved as a whole even for 2 body system. That solves the problem I guess.
It's conserved as a whole. That's it. I don't know, what you mean by "pairwise conserved". I've given the derivation of momentum conservation in #7 for the most common case that there are only pair interactions relevant. Is that what you mean by "pairwise conserved"?mark2142 said:Instead of saying that the momentum is conserved pairwise why not say the vector sum is conserved as a whole even for 2 body system. That solves the problem I guess.
That applies if the interactions are a sequence of discrete collisions involving two particles at a time. And it only applies to particles ##i## and ##j## when they interact.Delta2 said:Pairwise conserved means that for any two ##i,j## $$\dot p_i+\dot p_j=0$$
It holds if those are the two bodies in our system but in the case our system includes 3 or more bodies I don't think it necessarily holds.
vanhees71 said:Is that what you mean by "pairwise conserved"?
That is what I mean. I get it, It can only happen if there are only pair collisions(between 2 particles at a time) inside a system but that is not what happens.Delta2 said:Pairwise conserved means that for any two ##i,j## $$\dot p_i+\dot p_j=0$$
It holds if those are the two bodies in our system but in the case our system includes 3 or more bodies I don't think it necessarily holds.
Sorry for replying so late. I was trying to understand. I have made two diagrams. Is that what you mean by no need for position of line of action of a forces to coincide?jbriggs444 said:The proviso about collisions being on the same line is not needed.
Newton's third law applies in the x direction, the y direction and the z direction separately. As a result, momentum is conserved in the x direction, the y direction and the z directions separately.
One does not need the lines of action of all of the x-direction forces/impulses to coincide in order to conserve momentum in the x direction. The position of the line of action of a force is irrelevant for the purposes of linear momentum. It is enough that for each internal impulse there is an equal and opposite internal impulse.
No, that is not what I had in mind.mark2142 said:That is what I mean. I get it, It can only happen if there are only pair collisions(between 2 particles at a time) inside a system but that is not what happens.
Sorry for replying so late. I was trying to understand. I have made two diagrams. Is that what you mean by no need for position of line of action of a forces to coincide?
Newton's formulation involves only pairwise interactions. Technically, we need some kind of handwave or incantation make the leap from momentum conservation for pairwise interactions to momentum conservation for all possible many-body interactions.vanhees71 said:No, only total momentum is conserved.
Perhaps waving a few differentials and reciting the principle of superposition of vectors would do!jbriggs444 said:Newton's formulation involves only pairwise interactions. Technically, we need some kind of handwave or incantation make the leap from momentum conservation for pairwise interactions to momentum conservation for all possible many-body interactions.
Just don't let anyone see you do it and remember to clean up after.PeroK said:Perhaps waving a few differentials and reciting the principle of superposition of vectors would do!
Newton's mechanics or Noether's theorem (aka the symmetrie of the Newtonian spacetime model) does in no way restrict interactions to pair interactions. E.g., the interaction between nucleons contains generic ##n##-body forces. Even with only pair interactions the momentum conservation is not fulfilled for each particle pair but only for the total momentum (see the very simple derivation based on Newton's 3 postulates in #7).jbriggs444 said:Newton's formulation involves only pairwise interactions. Technically, we need some kind of handwave or incantation make the leap from momentum conservation for pairwise interactions to momentum conservation for all possible many-body interactions.
A more modern formulation would indeed take total momentum conservation as the given and pairwise conservation as a trivial special case.
Yes indeed.vanhees71 said:Newton's mechanics or Noether's theorem (aka the symmetrie of the Newtonian spacetime model) does in no way restrict interactions to pair interactions. E.g., the interaction between nucleons contains generic ##n##-body forces.
Please explain the above step. It looks like hideous garbling of Newton's second law.mark2142 said:Can I do it like this to conserve total P of say 3 body system in y-direction?
$$F_{aby}+F_{cby}+F_{cay}=-F_{bay}-F_{bcy}-F_{acy}$$
$$\frac d{dt}(p_{ay}+p_{cy}+p_{cy})=-\frac d{dt}(p_{by}+p_{by}+p_{ay})$$
Oh yes! It should bejbriggs444 said:Newton's second actually says that the derivative of the momentum of c is equal to the sum of the force of a on c and the force of b on c.