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elastic is when the objects in the collision bounce off one another and ENERGY IS CONSERVED.
The two colliding objects bounce off of each other, some of the momentum from one object will be transferred to the other object.
It is the second type of collision. And they may transfer momentum from one to the other.
a power is transferred but i dont think it is friction a power is transferred but i dont think it is friction i love cows. and cheese.
The collision with the ground is not 100% elastic - in other words, some energy is lost during the bounce.The collision with the ground is not 100% elastic - in other words, some energy is lost during the bounce.The collision with the ground is not 100% elastic - in other words, some energy is lost during the bounce.The collision with the ground is not 100% elastic - in other words, some energy is lost during the bounce.
Ineslastic collision
elastic is when the objects in the collision bounce off one another and ENERGY IS CONSERVED.
In an elastic collision, all initial kinetic energy is fully restored as final kinetic energy. where nothing is converted into noise, heat or any other form of energy. In an inelastic collision, kinetic energy is "lost" to thermal or sound energy.
There are two kinds of collision - elastic and inelastic. In an elastic collision, all the kinetic energy remains kinetic, though it might be transferred between objects in the collision. So the initially moving object could bounce back with the hit object staying in place, or the hit object might move and the initially moving object might stop. Or it might be a mix of both. Not only things that you think of as elastic have elastic collisions. Very hard things sometimes tend to have elastic collisions too. Not only rubber balls but also billiard balls and baseballs tend to have elastic collisions. The other type of collision is an inelastic collision. Some of the energy can remain in a kinetic form. The rest is converted to heat, sound, and breaking or deformation of the colliding objects.
Atoms and molecules bounce during collisions of any kind when they are in a solid, liquid or gas. The word "bounce" when used to refer to atoms or molecules means that the have a collision that may be considered elastic. This word "bounce" is not especially scientific. Instead one typically hears about colliions and those collisions are termed elastic or inelastic. If two chemical species are involved in a chemical reaction, then when they have a reactive collision, they do not bounce, but they exit the collision changed in some way. They exchange atoms or somehow exit the collision as one or two or more chemical species. Such collisions do not conserve kinetic energy.
Yes. They are made out of granite. From a physics perspective: when a curling rock hits another one straight-on, the collision is nearly inelastic, so almost all of the energy of the first rock is transferred to the second. This first rock does not bounce backwards, like it would if it were a ball.
Try this experiment: Tie a string around two pecans so you have a pecan on both ends. Hold the string in the middle and let one pecan swing into the other. Did it bounce? If it bounced, that was an elastic collision. I don't know about your pecans but my pecans bounce.
The two colliding objects bounce off of each other, some of the momentum from one object will be transferred to the other object.
The impacts are what cause air pressure. After collision, the air molecule moves away in a straight line until it hits something else.
It is the second type of collision. And they may transfer momentum from one to the other.
its a thing where you hit a iceberg and bounce off it again
a power is transferred but i dont think it is friction a power is transferred but i dont think it is friction i love cows. and cheese.