- Joined
- Jul 9, 2011
- Messages
- 313
- Reaction score
- 1
I am having a really hard time understanding this concept.
In a head-on collision between 2 identical balls each traveling at 20 m/s in opposite directions results in both rebounding with a speed of 10 m/s.
BR says here that they both have the same magnitudes of momentum before and after, so impulse in conserved.
I was wondering if anyone could explain what this means to me, because they clearly have very different magnitudes of momentum before and after the collision on an order of x2. Also, what does it mean that Impulse "conserved? Impulse is a value of change in momentum... And considering momentum changes, impulse clearly is not 0.
In a head-on collision between 2 identical balls each traveling at 20 m/s in opposite directions results in both rebounding with a speed of 10 m/s.
BR says here that they both have the same magnitudes of momentum before and after, so impulse in conserved.
I was wondering if anyone could explain what this means to me, because they clearly have very different magnitudes of momentum before and after the collision on an order of x2. Also, what does it mean that Impulse "conserved? Impulse is a value of change in momentum... And considering momentum changes, impulse clearly is not 0.