Physics SL
Physics SL
5
Chapters
329
Notes
Theme A - Space, Time & Motion
Theme A - Space, Time & Motion
Mastering Motion: Scalars Vs. Vectors Explained
Scalar Vs. Vector: Dive Into Speed & Velocity Insights
Master Distance-Time Graphs: A Student’s Journey Explained!
Understanding Instantaneous & Average Speed: A Student's Journey Explained
Understanding Acceleration: Dive Into Physics & Spreadsheets
Mastering Distance-Time Graphs: Speed, Velocity & Acceleration Insights
Mastering Kinematic Equations: Dive Into Distance-Time & Speed-Time Graphs
Unveiling Kinematic Equations: Dive into Motion Analysis
Incredible Dog Catch Explained: Dive Into Physics!
Gravity's Grip: Understanding Earth’s Acceleration Variances
Understanding 2D Projectile Motion: Beyond Basics
Understanding Horizontal & Vertical Motion in Physics
The Unrealistic Nature of Neglecting Air Resistance
Understanding Air Resistance's Impact on Vertical Motion
Comparing Trajectories: Vacuum Vs. Air Resistance (Figure 24)
Unveiling The Mystery Of Forces: From Aristotle To Modern Physics
Unraveling Newton's Laws of Motion: The Ultimate Guide to Force and Acceleration
Unveil The Science Of Motion: Master Free-Body Force Diagrams Easily!
Unraveling The Mysteries of Translational Equilibrium
Unlocking The Secrets Of Hooke's Law And Elastic Forces
Master The Physics Of Springs: Series Vs Parallel!
Uncover The Secrets of Buoyancy Forces!
Unraveling the slippery secrets of friction
Uncover The Mysteries Of Friction Forces
Understanding Air Resistance: The Record-Breaking Skydive Of Alan Eustace
Stokes' Law: Dive Deep Into Fluid Dynamics & Viscosity
Understanding Force & Momentum: From Sports To Physics
Newton's Cradle: Visualizing Momentum Transfer and Collisions
Unraveling Newton's Third Law: Momentum Conservation Explored
Understanding Momentum Conservation: The Recoil Of Guns & Water Hoses
Helicopter Physics & Momentum: Understanding Motion & Force
Unlocking The Secrets Of Circular Motion In Theme-Park Rides
Centripetal Acceleration: Exploring Forces & Circular Motion
Centripetal Forces: Unraveling The Secrets Of Satellites & Rides
Banked Tracks Explained: Maximizing Racing Safety & Performance
Vertical Circle Motion: Unraveling The Physics Behind Thrilling Rides
Unveiling The Physics Of Energy Transfer: A Historical Dive
Understanding Energy: Transfers, Forms, and Applications
Unlocking Energy Conservation: Noether's Pioneering Principle
Coriolis' Insight: Understanding Work Done & Energy Transfer
Understanding Force-Distance Graphs: Unlock Energy Calculations
Unraveling Power: Renee vs. Philippe's Climb Explained
Key Factors Determining a Car's Maximum Speed
Unlocking Kinetic Energy: Equations & Real-Life Examples
Unlocking Gravitational Potential Energy: Earth's Conservative Force
Unveiling The Secrets of Mechanical Energy
Unlock The Secrets Of Elastic Potential Energy
Unlock The Secrets Of Energy Flow With Sankey Diagrams
Unlock The Power Of Energy Density!
Unveiling The Truth Behind Fossil Fuels Extraction
Unlock The Secrets Of Angular Acceleration!
Unlock Rotational Motion Secrets: Essential Guide & Examples
Unravel Rotational Mechanics: From Graphs To Equations!
Master The Concept Of Moment Of Inertia!
Unleash The Secrets Of Rotational Motion!
Unveiling The Secrets of Forces and Torque
Unveiling Newton’s Third Law of Rotational Motion
Unlock The Secrets of Angular Momentum in Sports & Universe!
Unlocking Angular Impulse: Rotational Dynamics Simplified
Unlock The Secrets Of Angular Momentum Change!
Master The Art Of Motion: Rolling Vs. Sliding
Unlocking the Mysteries of Rolling and Slipping: An Energy Perspective
Unraveling Einstein's Relativity: Maxwell's Revolutionary Theory
Unlock The Mysteries Of Spacetime!
Unlock The Secrets Of The Universe With IB Diploma Physics
Unlock The Mysteries Of The Universe With Galilean Relativity
Unlock The Mysteries Of Time Dilation And Special Relativity
Unlocking Einstein's Special Relativity With Lorentz Transformation
Understanding Relativistic Velocity Addition: Lorentz vs. Galilean
Invariant Spacetime Intervals: Einstein's Revelations
Muon Decay Mysteries: Unraveling Time Dilation & GPS Insights
Unraveling Spacetime: Minkowski's Visionary Diagrams and Worldlines
Unlocking Spacetime Secrets: The Invariant Hyperbola Explained
Unlocking Proper Length & Relativity: Deep Dive Into Lorentz Transformations
Theme B - The Particulate Nature Of Matter
Theme B - The Particulate Nature Of Matter
Theme C - Wave Behaviour
Theme C - Wave Behaviour
Theme D - Fields
Theme D - Fields
Theme E - Nuclear & Quantum Physics
Theme E - Nuclear & Quantum Physics
IB Resources
Theme A - Space, Time & Motion
Physics SL
Physics SL

Theme A - Space, Time & Motion

Newton's Cradle: Visualizing Momentum Transfer and Collisions

Word Count Emoji
686 words
Reading Time Emoji
4 mins read
Updated at Emoji
Last edited on 5th Nov 2024

Table of content

Collisions & momentum

  • Newton’s Cradle (a desk toy with a series of spheres suspended in a line) is a great visual example of momentum transfer.
  • Momentum, symbolized by p, is transferred when a moving sphere hits another sphere, causing it to move.
  • This is a type of collision, defined as any interaction where momentum is transferred or shared between moving objects.
  • Real-life examples include firing a gun, hitting a ball with a bat, toy cars crashing, or a pile driver at a construction site.

✏️ Fun Fact: The Newton's Cradle wasn't invented by Newton but serves as an excellent example of his laws of motion in action!

Impulse & momentum

  • The change in velocity of colliding objects can be viewed as a change in momentum or the effect of a force acting for a certain time.
  • This involves a quantity known as impulse, represented by J.
  • We can derive a new equation from Newton's second law of motion (F = ma), substituting a with (v - u) t (change in velocity over time).
  • This leads to F = m \(\frac{v\ -\ u}{t}\) or F = \(\frac{Δp}{Δt}\)  which interprets as force equals change in momentum over the time taken for change.
  • Impulse is the product of force F and time Δt over which the force actsJ = FΔt.
  • The units of impulse are Newton seconds (Ns), equivalent to change in momentum, giving us another unit for momentum.

✏️ Real-World Example: A small group of people can push a heavy vehicle to get it moving. They exert a small force over a long time, similar to how impulse works!

Worked examples

Example

  • An impulse of 85 Ns acts on a body of mass 5.0 kg initially at rest. The final speed is \(\frac {85}{5} = 17 \frac {m}{s}\). In 2.0 seconds, the distance travelled is 34 m.

Example

  • A ball of mass 0.40 kg moves at a right angle to a wall, hitting the wall at a speed of 9.0 m/s and rebounds at a speed of 6.0 m/s in 50 ms.
  • The acceleration of the ball and the force between the ball and the wall need to be calculated.

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IB Resources
Theme A - Space, Time & Motion
Physics SL
Physics SL

Theme A - Space, Time & Motion

Newton's Cradle: Visualizing Momentum Transfer and Collisions

Word Count Emoji
686 words
Reading Time Emoji
4 mins read
Updated at Emoji
Last edited on 5th Nov 2024

Table of content

Collisions & momentum

  • Newton’s Cradle (a desk toy with a series of spheres suspended in a line) is a great visual example of momentum transfer.
  • Momentum, symbolized by p, is transferred when a moving sphere hits another sphere, causing it to move.
  • This is a type of collision, defined as any interaction where momentum is transferred or shared between moving objects.
  • Real-life examples include firing a gun, hitting a ball with a bat, toy cars crashing, or a pile driver at a construction site.

✏️ Fun Fact: The Newton's Cradle wasn't invented by Newton but serves as an excellent example of his laws of motion in action!

Impulse & momentum

  • The change in velocity of colliding objects can be viewed as a change in momentum or the effect of a force acting for a certain time.
  • This involves a quantity known as impulse, represented by J.
  • We can derive a new equation from Newton's second law of motion (F = ma), substituting a with (v - u) t (change in velocity over time).
  • This leads to F = m \(\frac{v\ -\ u}{t}\) or F = \(\frac{Δp}{Δt}\)  which interprets as force equals change in momentum over the time taken for change.
  • Impulse is the product of force F and time Δt over which the force actsJ = FΔt.
  • The units of impulse are Newton seconds (Ns), equivalent to change in momentum, giving us another unit for momentum.

✏️ Real-World Example: A small group of people can push a heavy vehicle to get it moving. They exert a small force over a long time, similar to how impulse works!

Worked examples

Example

  • An impulse of 85 Ns acts on a body of mass 5.0 kg initially at rest. The final speed is \(\frac {85}{5} = 17 \frac {m}{s}\). In 2.0 seconds, the distance travelled is 34 m.

Example

  • A ball of mass 0.40 kg moves at a right angle to a wall, hitting the wall at a speed of 9.0 m/s and rebounds at a speed of 6.0 m/s in 50 ms.
  • The acceleration of the ball and the force between the ball and the wall need to be calculated.

Unlock the Full Content! File Is Locked Emoji

Dive deeper and gain exclusive access to premium files of Physics SL. Subscribe now and get closer to that 45 🌟

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