The Law of Conservation of Momentum applies in two and three dimensions, too. To apply it in 2-D, split the momentum into x and y components and keep them separate. Write out two conservation of momentum equations, one for the x direction and one for the y direction.
Consider a collision between two pucks on a frictionless air hockey table. Puck 1 has a mass of 350 g and an initial velocity of 2.5 m/s in the +x direction. Puck 2 has a mass of 510 g and is initially at rest.
After the collision puck 1 has been deflected by 30 degrees and has a speed of 1.7 m/s. What is the speed and direction of puck 2 after the collision?
X | Y | |
---|---|---|
Before | p1ix = 0.35*2.5 p1ix = 0.875 kg m/s p2ix = 0 | p1yi = 0 p2yi = 0 |
After | p1fx = 0.35*1.7*cos(30) p1fx= 0.515 kg m/s p2fx = ? | p1yf = 0.35*1.7*sin(30) p1yf = 0.2975 kg m/s p2yf = ? |
Applying conservation of momentum in the x-direction:
p1ix + p2ix = p1fx + p2fx
p2fx = p1ix - p1fx
p2fx = 0.875 - 0.515 = 0.36 kg m/s
Applying conservation of momentum in the y-direction:
p1yi + p2yi = p1yf + p2yf
p2yf = -p1yf = -0.2975 kg m/s
The total momentum of the second puck after the collision is found from:
p2f2 = p2fx2 + p2yf2
p2f = 0.467 kg m/s
v2f = p2f / m2 = 0.467 / 0.51 = 0.916 m/s
The direction of puck 2 after the collision can be found from:
tan(θ) = p2yf / p2fx
It's fine to just use the magnitudes - we know puck 2 has +x and -y components.
θ = 39.6 degrees