Exercises on Conservation of Momentum
Helena Dedic
Beware: Many of the solutions to these exercises use !
Exercise 1
Consider a 20-g bullet (B) and a 60-kg athlete (A).
(a) If they have the same momentum, what is the ratio of their kinetic energies ?
(b) If they have the same kinetic energy, what is the ratio of their momenta ?
Exercise 2
What is the change of momentum of a particle when a net force of 1000 N pointing in the direction 37° West of North acts on it for one millisecond?
Exercise 3
The total momentum of a system of three particles has zero y-component. The momentum of the first particle has a magnitude of 96 and points in the direction of 60° East of South. The momentum of the second particle has a magnitude of 167 and points in the direction of 53° North of East. The third particle moves in the direction of 60° South of West. Determine the magnitude and the direction of the total momentum of the system and the magnitude of the momentum of the third particle.
Exercise 4
A 10,000-kg truck moves at 30 m/s. At what speed would a 1200 kg car have the same value of
(a) linear momentum;
(b) kinetic energy?
Exercise 5
A 6-kg bomb moving at 5 m/s in the direction 37° South of East explodes into three pieces. A 3-kg piece moves off at 2 m/s at 53° North of East while a 2-kg piece moves West at 3 m/s. What is the velocity of the third fragment? Assume all motion occurs in a horizontal plane.
Exercise 6
A nucleus of radioactive radium (), initially at rest, decays into a radon nucleus () and an particle (a ). The kinetic energy of the particle is after the decay. The mass of is 226 ; the mass of radon is 222 and the mass of is 4 . You may recall from chemistry that a unified mass unit .
(a) Determine the recoil speed of the radon nucleus.
(b) Determine its kinetic energy.