Sunteți pe pagina 1din 12

Physics!

/ Unit V / MTM

Name: ________________________________

Momentum Transfer Model


New Fundamental Principle

New Representation: IFF Charts

from Modeling Workshop Project 2006

Physics! / Unit 05 / MTM

Experiment: Cart Crash

from Modeling Workshop Project 2006 !

Physics! / Unit V / MTM

Activity/Notes: N2L, Collisions, and Conservation

from Modeling Workshop Project 2006

Physics! / Unit 05 / MTM

Worksheet 1: IFF Charts in Action


1. An astronaut whose mass is 80 kg carries an empty oxygen tank with a mass of 10 kg. He throws the tank away from himself with a speed of 2 m/s. With what velocity does he start to move off into space?

2.

A 2 kg melon is balanced on your bald uncles head. His son, Throckmorton, shoots a 50 g arrow at it with a speed of 30 m/s. The arrow passes through the melon and emerges with a speed of 18 m/s. Find the speed of the melon as it ies off the mans head.

image from thingsonyourhead.com (no, seriously)

3.

A tennis player returns a 30 m/s serve straight back at 25 m/s, after making contact with the ball for 0.5 s. If the ball has a mass of 0.2 kg, what is the force she exerted on the ball?

from Modeling Workshop Project 2006 !

Physics! / Unit V / MTM

4.

A raft of mass 180 kg carries two swimmers with masses 50 kg and 80 kg. The raft is initially oating at rest. The two swimmers simultaneously dive off opposite ends of the raft, each with a horizontal velocity of 3 m/s. With what velocity and in what direction does the raft start to move?

5.

One way of measuring the muzzle velocity of a bullet is to re it horizontally into a massive block of wood placed on a cart. Assuming no friction, we then measure the velocity with which the wood containing the bullet and cart begin to move. In one experiment the bullet had a mass of 50 g and the wood and its cart had a combined mass of 10 kg. After the shot, the cart, wood, and bullet moved at a constant speed, traveling 0.80 m in 0.40 s. From this data determine the original speed of the bullet. (That is, the speed of the bullet right before it hits the cart.)

from Modeling Workshop Project 2006

Physics! / Unit 05 / MTM

6.

A 50 kg cart is moving across a very low friction oor at 2.0 m/s. A 70 kg boy, riding in the cart, jumps off so that he hits the oor with zero velocity. What is the change in momentum of the cart?

7.

A ball of mass 3 kg, moving at 2 m/s eastward, strikes head-on a ball of mass 1 kg that is moving at 2 m/s westward. The balls stick together after the impact. What is the magnitude and direction of the velocity of the combined mass after the collision?

from Modeling Workshop Project 2006 !

Physics! / Unit V / MTM

Worksheet 2: Explaining with MTM


8. If you throw a ball horizontally while standing on roller skates, you roll backwards. Will you roll backwards if you go through the motions of throwing the ball, but hold on to it instead? Explain your reasoning.

9.

Which has the greater change in momentum, a 50 gram clay ball that strikes a wall at 1 m/s and sticks or a 50 gram superball that strikes a wall at 1 m/s and bounces away from the wall at 0.8 m/s? Explain your reasoning.

10. Why are padded dashboards safer than hard dashboards in automobiles?

11. Why are nylon ropes, which stretch considerably under stress, favored by mountain climbers?

from Modeling Workshop Project 2006

Physics! / Unit 05 / MTM

Worksheet 3: Bottomless Problems


12. Julio (an 80 kg ice skating champion) and Grace are skating together on a rink at 3 m/s. Julio keeps asking Grace how much she weighs. Annoyed, Grace pushes away from Julio so that she speeds up to 4 m/s and he slows down to 2.25 m/s, in the same direction. The push lasts for 0.20 seconds. Friction, in the physics sense, is negligible in this drama.

from Modeling Workshop Project 2006 !

Physics! / Unit V / MTM

from Modeling Workshop Project 2006

Physics! / Unit 05 / MTM

13. A 5000 kg truck rear-ends a 1200 kg car when the car was moving at 13 m/s. During the 0.15 second collision, the truck slows down from 14 m/s to 13.5 m/s. The road is dangerously slick, but not completely frictionless ( = 0.1 between the cars and the road). Note: The sliding friction force between two surfaces can be approximated by using the coefcient of friction ( ) and the normal force between those same two surfaces (FN). The relationship is Ff = FN.

from Modeling Workshop Project 2006 !

10

Physics! / Unit V / MTM

11

from Modeling Workshop Project 2006

Physics! / Unit 05 / MTM

MTM Model Summary

New Concept Map

from Modeling Workshop Project 2006 !

12

S-ar putea să vă placă și