Science, asked by itsplasmagaming, 1 month ago

When a moving object collides with an object that isn’t moving, what happens to the kinetic energy of each object?

Answers

Answered by vardhan67
30

Explanation:

Since the objects are all motionless after the collision, the final kinetic energy is also zero; the loss of kinetic energy is a maximum. Such a collision is said to be perfectly inelastic.

Answered by tripathiakshita48
0

Answer:

The final kinetic energy is also zero.

Explanation:

When a moving object collides with a stationary object of identical mass, the stationary object encounters the greater collision force. When a moving object collides with a stationary object of identical mass, the stationary object encounters the greater momentum change. In collisions between two objects momentum is conserved. Since the initial momentum is not zero, the final momentum is not zero. Perfectly inelastic means when a change in price causes a smaller change in demand. Perfectly inelastic demand means that prices or quantities are fixed and are not affected by the other variable. Unitary demand occurs when a change in price causes a perfectly proportionate change in quantity demanded. Both objects cannot be at rest. It is possible for one of the objects to be at rest after the collision.

Since the objects are all motionless after the collision, the final kinetic energy is also zero; the loss of kinetic energy is a maximum. Such a collision is said to be perfectly inelastic.

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