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Q: Why do objects stick together after a collision?
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What are Four different collision scenarios of conservation of momentum?

Elastic collision: objects bound against each other after the collision. - One is moving and the other is at rest. - Both objects are moving. Inelastic collision: objects stick together after the collision. - One is moving and the other is at rest. - Both objects are moving.


What is the difference between elastic and inelastic collisions?

Elastic Collision is the collision in which colliding objects rebound without lasting deformation or heat generation.Inelastic collision is a collision in which the colliding objects become distorted and generate heat during collision and possibly stick together.


When two objects collide and completely stick together the collision is said to be inelastic True Or False?

True.


What is the difference between inelastic collision and perfectly inelastic collision?

In an inelastic collision kinetic energy is lost (generally through energy used to change an objects shape), but the two objects rebound off each other with the remaining kinetic energy. In a perfectly inelastic collision the two objects stick together after the collision.


What happens to the total momentum of two objects in a system before and after interactions?

The total momentum before the collision is the same as the total momentum after the collision. This is known as "conservation of momentum".


Velcro cart to magnestic bumper cart collision is this an inelastic or elastic collision?

elastoc collision because they can stick together


What collision produces more energy?

That depends what you mean by "produce". You may be aware that you can't create energy where there was none before.In a perfectly elastic collision, no kinetic energy is lost.In an inelastic collision (the objects stick together after the collision), much of the kinetic energy is converted into other forms of energy, mainly heat.


Why can an explosion be considered and inelastic collision in reverse?

In a normal perfectly inelastic collision, objects stick together, and there is damage done. Kinetic energy is not conserved, but momentum is. However, an explosion is a perfectly inelastic collision in reverse, because instead of having objects coming at each other and sticking together, the objects are already stuck together, and fly apart. The equation for this is [m1 v1 + m2 v2] = [m1 + m2]*v The damage done would be the chemical reaction involved. Atoms were at first stuck together, but there was a chemical reaction [aka "damage" because atoms were changed], and then the atoms fly apart. Thus, a perfectly inelastic collision in reverse. Be careful how you use the physics terms; it's not an inelastic collision [that's when objects impact then part].


What happens to the cars if they stick together in a collision?

their stick in each other? O, o stop it your hood is hurting my trunk. sexual innuendo


When two objects stick together at after a collision their velocity?

Placing a question mark at the end of a phrase does not make it a sensible question. Please edit the question to include more context or relevant information and stating clearly what you wish to know.


A 1 kg mass is sliding along a frictionless surface at plus 6 ms and collides with another object mass equals 3 kg at rest The collision is perfectly inelastic What is the velocity of the 1kg obj?

In a perfectly inelastic collision, the two objects stick together and the momentum is conserved. Once the objects stick together, they both have the same velocity. p = mv where p is the momentum conservation of momentum for perfectly inelastic collision: m1v1i + m2v2i = (m1 + m2)vf (1kg)(6m/s) + (3kg)(0m/s) = (1 kg + 3kg)vf 6 kg·m/s = (4kg) vf vf = v1f = v2f = 1.5 m/s


When two objects bounce away this collision is considered an?

Ineslastic collision