登录

When two or more objects collide with each other, they can stick together to form one single composite object (after collision). The total mass of the object after the collision is the sum of the masses of the original objects, and it moves with a velocity dictated by the conservation of momentum. Although the system's total momentum remains constant, the kinetic energy decreases, and thus such a collision is an inelastic collision. Most of the collisions between objects in daily life are inelastic in nature. Some examples of inelastic collision are:

  1. A plastic ball dropped from a shelf, and it is unable to rise to its original height
  2. An accident between two vehicles on the road or a truck hitting a tree

In an inelastic collision, the final kinetic energy tends to decrease and remains lower than the initial kinetic energy of the system.

In some special cases, multiple objects collide, stick together, and remain motionless after the collision. Since the objects are all motionless after the collision, the final kinetic energy is also zero, and thus the loss of kinetic energy is at a maximum. This is a perfectly inelastic collision. For example, when a mud ball is thrown against the wall, it sticks to the wall and loses maximum kinetic energy.

This text is adapted from Openstax, University Physics Volume 1, Section 9.4: Types of Collisions.

Tags

Inelastic CollisionKinetic Energy LossMomentum ConservationComposite ObjectPlastic BallVehicle AccidentMud BallPerfectly Inelastic Collision

来自章节 9:

article

Now Playing

9.8 : Types of Collisions - II

Linear Momentum, Impulse and Collisions

6.6K Views

JoVE Logo

政策

使用条款

隐私

科研

教育

关于 JoVE

版权所属 © 2025 MyJoVE 公司版权所有,本公司不涉及任何医疗业务和医疗服务。