📚 Learning Guide
Classical Mechanics Principles
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In a closed system, two objects collide elastically. Object A with a mass of 2 kg moving at 3 m/s collides with object B, which has a mass of 4 kg and is initially at rest. What is the final velocity of object A after the collision if momentum is conserved?

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Choose the Best Answer

A

1 m/s

B

2 m/s

C

0 m/s

D

3 m/s

Understanding the Answer

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Answer

The initial momentum is \(2\,\text{kg}\times3\,\text{m/s}=6\,\text{kg·m/s}\). Because the collision is elastic, both momentum and kinetic energy are conserved, giving the formula for the first object's final speed: \(v_{1f}=\frac{m_1-m_2}{m_1+m_2}\,v_{1i}+\frac{2m_2}{m_1+m_2}\,v_{2i}\). Substituting \(m_1=2\text{ kg}, m_2=4\text{ kg}, v_{1i}=3\text{ m/s}, v_{2i}=0\) yields \(v_{1f}=\frac{2-4}{6}\times3=-1\text{ m/s}\). Thus after the collision object A moves backward at \(1\text{ m/s}\) (opposite its initial direction). A quick check: the final momentum \(2(-1)+4(2)=6\) kg·m/s, matching the initial momentum.

Detailed Explanation

Momentum must stay the same before and after the collision. Other options are incorrect because This answer assumes A keeps half its speed, but momentum conservation shows A slows down more; Zero speed would mean A stops completely, which would give B 1.5 m/s.

Key Concepts

Momentum
Conservation of Momentum
Topic

Classical Mechanics Principles

Difficulty

medium level question

Cognitive Level

understand

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