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John O' Meara
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An atom of mass m moving in the x direction with speed v collides elastically with an atom of mass 3m at rest. After the collision the first atom moves in the y direction. Find the direction of motion of the second atom and speed of both atoms (in terms of v) after the collision?
Ans: mass m moves at v/sqrt(2), mass 3m moves at v/sqrt(6) in the direction theta=-35.3 degrees.
Momentum before = momentum after
MV1i + MV2i = MV1f + MV2f
x-direction MV1i = MV1fx + MV2fx
y-direction 0 = MV1fy + MV2fy
this translates into
mv = mV1fx + 3mV2fx ......(i)
0 = mV1fy + 3mV2fy ......(ii)
mv^2 = m(0 + V1fy^2) + 3m(V2fx^2 + V2fy^2) ...(iii)
where :
M, V1i, V2i, V1f, V2f, V1fx, V2fx, V1fy, V2fy , etc are variables
m,v are values
x = x-component , y = y-component, f = final , i = initial
The question is are these equations right, as I cannot get the above answers
Thanks and regards.
Ans: mass m moves at v/sqrt(2), mass 3m moves at v/sqrt(6) in the direction theta=-35.3 degrees.
Momentum before = momentum after
MV1i + MV2i = MV1f + MV2f
x-direction MV1i = MV1fx + MV2fx
y-direction 0 = MV1fy + MV2fy
this translates into
mv = mV1fx + 3mV2fx ......(i)
0 = mV1fy + 3mV2fy ......(ii)
mv^2 = m(0 + V1fy^2) + 3m(V2fx^2 + V2fy^2) ...(iii)
where :
M, V1i, V2i, V1f, V2f, V1fx, V2fx, V1fy, V2fy , etc are variables
m,v are values
x = x-component , y = y-component, f = final , i = initial
The question is are these equations right, as I cannot get the above answers
Thanks and regards.
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