Ask Question
21 January, 22:25

Suppose a clay model of a koala bear has a mass of 0.25 kg and slides on ice at a speed of 0.85 m/s. It runs into another clay model, which is initially motionless and has a mass of 0.45 kg. Both being soft clay, they naturally stick together. Friction on ice can be neglected.

+1
Answers (1)
  1. 22 January, 00:41
    0
    vf = 0.3 m/s

    Explanation:

    Assuming no external forces act during the collision, total momentum must be conserved.

    The initial momentum is due to the koala bear moving at 0.85 m/s:

    p₀ = m₁ * v₀₁ = 0.25 kg. 0.85 m/s = 0.21 N. m

    As the collision is inelastic, both masses stick together, so the final momentum can be written as follows:

    p₁ = (m₁ + m₂) * vf₁₂ = 0.7 kg * vf₁₂ = 0.21 N. m (as p₀ = p₁,

    Now, we can solve for the common speed of both masses after the collision, as follows:

    vf₁₂ = 0.21 N. m / 0.7 kg = 0.3 m/s (in the same direction that v₀₁).
Know the Answer?
Not Sure About the Answer?
Find an answer to your question ✅ “Suppose a clay model of a koala bear has a mass of 0.25 kg and slides on ice at a speed of 0.85 m/s. It runs into another clay model, which ...” in 📘 Physics if you're in doubt about the correctness of the answers or there's no answer, then try to use the smart search and find answers to the similar questions.
Search for Other Answers