Physics, asked by bzvsh, 11 months ago

Answer carefully, with reasons:
(a) In an elastic collision of two billiard balls, is the total kinetic energy conserved during the short time of collision of the balls (i.e. when they are in contact)?
(b) Is the total linear momentum conserved during the short time of an elastic collision of two balls?
(c) What are the answers to (a) and (b) for an inelastic collision?
(d) If the potential energy of two billiard balls depends only on the separation distance between their centres, is the collision elastic or inelastic? (Note, we are talking here of potential energy corresponding to the force during collision, not gravitational potential energy).​

Answers

Answered by Sneha994
5

Explanation:

(a) No

K.E. is not conserved during the given elastic collision, K.E. before and after collision is the same. Infact, during collision, K.E. of the balls gets converted into potential energy.

(b) Yes

In an elastic collision, the total linear momentum of the system always remains conserved.

(c) No; Yes

In an inelastic collision, there is always a loss of kinetic energy, i.e., the total kinetic energy of the billiard balls before collision will always be greater than that after collision.

The total linear momentum of the system of billiards balls will remain conserved even in the case of an inelastic collision.

(d) Elastic

In the given case, the forces involved are conservation. This is because they depend on the separation between the centres of the billiard balls. Hence, the collision is elastic.

Answered by anamikapradeep7
0

hey mate...

here is your answer...

(a) In an inelastic collision, there is always a loss of kinetic energy, i.e., the total kinetic energy of the billiard balls before collision will always be greater than that after collision. The total linear momentum of the system of billiards balls will remain conserved even in the case of an inelastic collision.

(b) Yes, total linear momentum remains conserved during the short time of an elastic collision of two balls. The balls exert forces on one another due to which individual momenta of two balls change but total linear momentum remains conserved.

(c) For an inelastic, collision kinetic energy is not  conserved but total linear momentum is conserved even now.

(d) As the potential energy depends only on the  separation distance between the centres of balls, it means that conservative forces are in action (because PE changes due to conservative forces only). Hence, collision is surely inelastic collision.

hope it helps...

please mark as the brainliest...

Similar questions