not a lot of things but if you take a look around your house with a ruler maybe that could help
Gauge Blocks are wrung together by sliding 2 blocks together so their faces bond. Because of their flat surfaces, when they are wrung, they stick to each other tightly.
A meter stick of course!
No the meter stick is larger
3 m/s
A perfectly inelastic collision occurs when objects stick together after colliding, resulting in their combined mass moving together at the same velocity. This type of collision involves the maximum loss of kinetic energy.
When two bodies stick together after a collision, it is known as a perfectly inelastic collision. In this type of collision, the kinetic energy is not conserved and the two objects move together as a single system after the collision. This usually occurs when the objects are made to stick together due to adhesive forces or when there is a high amount of deformation during the collision.
To find the final velocity of the two objects when they stick together after the collision, you can use the principles of conservation of momentum. The total momentum before the collision is equal to the total momentum after the collision. Use the formula: m1v1_initial + m2v2_initial = (m1 + m2)v_final, where m1 and m2 are the masses of the two objects, v1_initial and v2_initial are their initial velocities, and v_final is their final velocity when they stick together after the collision.
Objects stick together after a collision due to the conservation of momentum and energy. When two objects collide, the total momentum of the system is conserved, leading them to stick together if the resulting momentum can only be achieved by them moving together. Additionally, kinetic energy may be converted into other forms, such as deformation or sound, causing the objects to stick together.
True. In an inelastic collision, objects collide and stick together, resulting in a loss of kinetic energy.
The total momentum after the collision remains the same as before the collision. This is because momentum is conserved in a closed system, even when objects stick together. The momentum of the two objects is simply combined into a single object after the collision.
It is called interlocking, where two objects become entwined or stuck together after a collision.
The total momentum before the collision is the same as the total momentum after the collision. This is known as "conservation of momentum".
In a perfectly inelastic collision, the two objects stick together after the collision. The velocity of the objects after collision will be a weighted average of their initial velocities based on their masses. The velocity of ball a after collision can be calculated using the formula: (m1 * v1 + m2 * v2) / (m1 + m2), where v1 and v2 are the initial velocities of balls a and b, and m1 and m2 are the masses of balls a and b respectively.
Yes, linear momentum is conserved when two objects collide and stick together. This means that the total momentum of the system before the collision is equal to the total momentum of the system after the collision.
Head-on collision between two objects of equal mass moving in opposite directions. Elastic collision between two objects of different masses where one is initially at rest. Inelastic collision between two objects where they stick together after colliding. Explosion of an object into two pieces in opposite directions.
The velocity of the gliders after they stick together will be zero, as the total momentum of the system will remain conserved. Since they have the same mass and opposite velocities before the collision, their momenta will cancel out when they collide and stick together.