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Momentum conservation

Momentum is conserved in a collision or explosion in an isolated system where no external forces act. In other words the momentum before the collision or explosion is the same as that after it. This is true for ALL collisions and explosions Consider a cannon at rest firing a shell.

Momentum before explosion = Momentum after explosion = 0 = MV+mv

where M and V are the mass and velocity of the cannon and m and v are the mass and velocity of the shell. So V = - mv/M, the minus sign meaning that the cannon is moving in the opposite direction to the shell. (Remember that momentum is a vector)

In a collision the same law of conservation of momentum applies. If a mass m1 moving at a velocity u1 collides with a mass m2 moving at a velocity u2 such that after the collision m1 moves at v1 and m2 moves at v2 then:-

momentum before collision = momentum after collision
m1u1 + m2u2 = m1v1 + m2v2
 
 
 
© Keith Gibbs 2010