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Chapter 7

Impulse and Momentum

7.1 The Impulse-Momentum Theorem

There are many situations when the


force on an object is not constant.

7.1 The Impulse-Momentum Theorem

DEFINITION OF IMPULSE
The impulse of a force is the product of the average
force and the time interval during which the force acts:

r r
J = F !t
Impulse is a vector quantity and has the same direction
as the average force.

newton ! seconds (N ! s)

7.1 The Impulse-Momentum Theorem

r r
J = F !t

7.1 The Impulse-Momentum Theorem

DEFINITION OF LINEAR MOMENTUM


The linear momentum of an object is the product
of the objects mass times its velocity:

r
r
p = mv
Linear momentum is a vector quantity and has the same
direction as the velocity.

kilogram ! meter/second (kg ! m/s)

7.1 The Impulse-Momentum Theorem

r r
r vf " vo
a=
!t
r
r
! F = ma

r mvr f " mvr o


# F = !t
r
r
r
# F "t = mv f ! mv o

( )

7.1 The Impulse-Momentum Theorem

IMPULSE-MOMENTUM THEOREM
When a net force acts on an object, the impulse of
this force is equal to the change in the momentum
of the object

impulse

r
r
r
# F "t = mv f ! mv o

( )

final momentum

initial momentum

7.1 The Impulse-Momentum Theorem

Example: Hitting a pitched baseball. A baseball of mass


0.14 kg is pitched at a batter with an initial velocity of
-38 m/s (negative is towards the bat). The bat applies an
average force that is much greater than the weight of the
ball, and the ball departs from the bat with a final velocity
of +58 m/s. Assuming that the time of contact with the bat
is 1.6 x 10-3 s, find the average force exerted on the ball
by the bat.

r
r
r
J = F "t = mv f ! mv o
= (0.14)(58) - (0.14)(-38) = +13.4 kg m/s
_

F = J/t
= (13.4)/(1.6 x 10-3) = +8400 N

7.1 The Impulse-Momentum Theorem

Example: A Rain Storm


Rain comes down with a velocity of -15 m/s and hits the
roof of a car. The mass of rain per second that strikes
the roof of the car is 0.060 kg/s. Assuming that rain comes
to rest upon striking the car, find the average force
exerted by the rain on the roof.

r
r
r
# F "t = mv f ! mv o

( )

7.1 The Impulse-Momentum Theorem

Neglecting the weight of


the raindrops, the net force
on a raindrop is simply the
force on the raindrop due to
the roof.

r
r
r
F "t = mv f ! mv o

r
& m #r
F = ($ ! v o
% 't "

r
F = !(0.060 kg s )(! 15 m s ) = +0.90 N

7.1 The Impulse-Momentum Theorem

Conceptual Example: Hailstones Versus Raindrops


Instead of rain, suppose hail is falling. Unlike rain, hail usually
bounces off the roof of the car.
If hail fell instead of rain, would the force be smaller than, equal
to, or greater than that calculated in the previous Example?

7.2 The Principle of Conservation of Linear Momentum

WORK-ENERGY THEOREM CONSERVATION OF ENERGY

IMPULSE-MOMENTUM THEOREM ???

Apply the impulse-momentum theorem to the midair collision


between two objects..

7.2 The Principle of Conservation of Linear Momentum

The midair collision between two


objects.
Internal forces Forces that objects within
the system exert on each other.

External forces Forces exerted on objects


by agents external to the system.

7.2 The Principle of Conservation of Linear Momentum

r
r
r
# F "t = mv f ! mv o

( )

OBJECT 1

r
r
r
r
W1 + F12 "t = m1 v f 1 ! m1 v o1

External
forces
(gravity)

Internal
forces

OBJECT 2

r
r
r
r
W2 + F21 "t = m2 v f 2 ! m2 v o 2

7.2 The Principle of Conservation of Linear Momentum

r
r
r
r
W1 + F12 "t = m1 v f 1 ! m1 v o1

r
r
r
r
W2 + F21 "t = m2 v f 2 ! m2 v o 2

r
r
r
r
r
r
r
r
W1 + W2 + F12 + F21 "t = (m1 v f 1 + m2 v f 2 )! (m1 v o1 + m2 v o 2 )

r
r
F12 = ! F21
Internal forces cancel
from Newtons 3rd law

r
Pf
Total final
momentum

r
Po
Total initial
momentum

7.2 The Principle of Conservation of Linear Momentum

The internal forces cancel out.

r
r
r r
W1 + W2 "t = Pf ! Po

r r
(sum of average external forces)"t = Pf ! Po

7.2 The Principle of Conservation of Linear Momentum

r r
(sum of average external forces)"t = Pf ! Po
If the sum of the external forces is zero, then

r r
0 = Pf ! Po

r
r
Pf = Po

PRINCIPLE OF CONSERVATION OF LINEAR MOMENTUM


The total linear momentum of an isolated system is constant
(conserved). An isolated system is one for which the sum of
the average external forces acting on the system is zero.

7.2 The Principle of Conservation of Linear Momentum

Conceptual Example: Is the Total Momentum Conserved?


Imagine two balls colliding on a billiard
table that is friction-free. Use the momentum
conservation principle in answering the
following questions. (a) Is the total momentum
of the two-ball system the same before
and after the collision? (b) Answer
part (a) for a system that contains only
one of the two colliding
balls.

7.2 The Principle of Conservation of Linear Momentum


PRINCIPLE OF CONSERVATION OF LINEAR MOMENTUM
The total linear momentum of an isolated system is constant
(conserved). An isolated system is one for which the sum of
the average external forces acting on the system is zero.

In the top picture the net external force on the


system is zero.

In the bottom picture the net external force on the


system is not zero.

7.2 The Principle of Conservation of Linear Momentum

Applying the Principle of Conservation of Linear Momentum


1. Decide which objects are included in the system.
2. Relative to the system, identify the internal and external forces.
3. Verify that the system is isolated.
4. Set the final momentum of the system equal to its initial momentum.
Remember that momentum is a vector.

7.2 The Principle of Conservation of Linear Momentum

Example: Ice Skaters


Starting from rest, two skaters
push off against each other on
ice where friction is negligible.
One is a 54-kg woman and
one is a 88-kg man. The woman
moves away with a speed of
+2.5 m/s. Find the recoil velocity
of the man.

7.2 The Principle of Conservation of Linear Momentum

r
r
Pf = Po

m1v f 1 + m2 v f 2 = 0

vf 2 = !

vf 2

m1v f 1
m2

(
54 kg )(+ 2.5 m s )
=!
= !1.5 m s
88 kg

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