During a collision, an object experiences an impulse that changes its momentum. The impulse is equal to the momentum change. The impulse is the product of Force•∆Time. The momentum change is the product of Mass•∆Velocity. One can use the Force•∆Time = Mass•∆Velocity relationship to determine the set of collision parameters required to change the object's momentum from the initial state value to the final state value.
Being Impulsive About Momentum Change - Questions 5 Help
There are three very similar versions of this question. Each version provides a before-after diagram showing the initial and final momentum of an object. Five force-time combinations are presented. One of them would cause the specified change of state. This is one of the three versions:
Version 1
Pre- and post-collision information is shown. Identify the collision parameters that are consistent with the indicated change in momentum. (A + sign indicates a rightward direction; a - sign indicates a leftward direction.)
a. F = +2 N, ∆t = 3 s
b. F = +6 N, ∆t = 2 s
c. F = +9 N, ∆t = 2 s
d. F = +9 N, ∆t = 1 s
e. F = +3 N, ∆t = 1 s
Try the links below to our Tutorial for more information:
Momentum
Impulse-Momentum Change Theorem