Considerations and experiments like this led Descartes to invent the concept of "momentum", meaning "amount of motion", and to state that for a moving body the momentum was just the product of the mass of the body and its speed. Momentum is traditionally labeled by the letter p, so his definition was:
for a body having mass m and moving at speed v.
It is then obvious that in the above scenario of the woman catching
the medicine ball, total "momentum" is the same before
and after the catch. Initially, only the ball had momentum, an
amount 5x5 = 25 in suitable units, since its mass is 5kg and its
speed is 5 meters per second. After the catch, there is a total
mass of 50kg moving at a speed of 0.5 meters per second, so the
final momentum is 0.5x50 = 25, the total final amount is equal
to the total initial amount. We have just invented these figures,
of course, but they reflect what is observed experimentally.
What about
two people on rollerskates, of equal weight, coming directly towards
each other at equal but opposite velocities---and when they meet
they put their hands together and come to a complete halt? Clearly
in this situation there was plenty of motion before the collision
and none afterwards, hence momentum must be a vector
In other words, if something moving to the right was taken
to have positive momentum, then one should consider something
moving to the left to have negative momentum. With this convention,
two people of equal mass coming together from opposite directions
at the same speed would have total momentum zero, so if
they came to a complete halt after meeting, as described above,
the total momentum before the collision would be the same as the
total after---that is, zero---and momentum would be conserved.
in general, so, since velocity is a vector, momentum is also a vector, pointing in the same direction as the velocity, of course.
It turns out experimentally that in any collision between two objects (where no interaction with third objects, such as surfaces, interferes), the total momentum before the collision is the same as the total momentum after the collision. It doesn't matter if the two objects stick together on colliding or bounce off, or what kind of forces they exert on each other, so conservation of momentum is a very general rule, quite independent of details of the collision.
To understand how this comes about, consider first Newton's Second Law relating the acceleration a of a body of mass m with an external force F acting on it:
Recall that acceleration is rate of change of velocity, so we can rewrite the Second Law:
Now, the momentum is mv, mass x velocity. This means for an object having constant mass
This means that Newton's Second Law can be rewritten:
Now think of a collision, or any kind of interaction, between two objects A and B, say. From Newton's Third Law, the force A feels from B is of equal magnitude to the force B feels from A, but in the opposite direction. Since (as we have just shown) force = rate of change of momentum, it follows that throughout the interaction process the rate of change of momentum of A is exactly opposite to the rate of change of momentum of B. In other words, since these are vectors, they are of equal length but pointing in opposite directions. This means that for every bit of momentum A gains, B gains the negative of that. In other words, B loses momentum at exactly the rate A gains momentum so their total momentum remains the same. But this is true throughout the interaction process, from beginning to end. Therefore, the total momentum at the end must be what it was at the beginning.
You may be thinking at this point: so what? Nevertheless, we do know that momentum will be conserved anyway, so if, for example, the two objects stick together, and no bits fly off, we can find their final velocity just from momentum conservation, without knowing any details of the collision.
where only distance traveled in the direction the force is pushing
counts.
With this definition, carrying the box of books across
the room from one shelf to another of equal height doesn't count
as work, because even though your arms have to exert a force upwards
to keep the box from falling to the floor, you do not move the
box in the direction of that force, that is, upwards.
To get a more quantitative idea of how much work is being done,
we need to have some units to measure work. This unit of force
is called one newton .
Note that a one kilogram mass, when dropped, accelerates downwards
at ten meters per second per second. This means that its weight,
its gravitational attraction towards the earth, must be equal
to ten newtons. From this we can figure out that a one newton
force equals the weight of 100 grams, just less than a quarter
of a pound, a stick of butter.
The downward acceleration of a freely falling object, ten meters
per second per second, is often written g for short. (To
be precise, g = 9.83 meters per second per second, and in
fact varies somewhat over the earth's surface, but this adds complication
without illumination, so we shall always take it to be 10.)
If we have a mass of m kilograms, say, we know its weight
will accelerate it at g if it's dropped, so its weight
is a force of magnitude mg, from Newton's Second Law.
Now back to work. This unit of work is called one joule,
Finally, it is useful to have a unit for rate of working,
also called "power". The natural unit of "rate
of working" is manifestly one joule per second, and this
is called one watt.
A common English unit of power is the horsepower, which
is 746 watts.
For example, it takes work to drive a nail into a piece of wood---a force has to push the nail a certain distance, against the resistance of the wood. A moving hammer, hitting the nail, can drive it in. A stationary hammer placed on the nail does nothing. The moving hammer has energy---the ability to drive the nail in---because it's moving. This hammer energy is called "kinetic energy". Kinetic is just the Greek word for motion.
Another way to drive the nail in, if you have a good aim, might be to simply drop the hammer onto the nail from some suitable height. By the time the hammer reaches the nail, it will have kinetic energy. It has this energy, of course, because the force of gravity (its weight) accelerated it as it came down. But this energy didn't come from nowhere. Work had to be done in the first place to lift the hammer to the height from which it was dropped onto the nail. In fact, the work done in the initial lifting, force x distance, is just the weight of the hammer multiplied by the distance it is raised, in joules. But this is exactly the same amount of work as gravity does on the hammer in speeding it up during its fall onto the nail. Therefore, while the hammer is at the top, waiting to be dropped, it can be thought of as storing the work that was done in lifting it, which is ready to be released at any time. This "stored work" is called potential energy, since it has the potential of being transformed into kinetic energy just by releasing the hammer.
To give an example, suppose we have a hammer of mass 2 kg, and
we lift it up through 5 meters. The hammer's weight, the force
of gravity, is 20 newtons (recall it would accelerate at 10 meters
per second per second under gravity, like anything else) so the
work done in lifting it is force x distance = 20 x 5 = 100 joules,
since lifting it at a steady speed requires a lifting force that
just balances the weight. This 100 joules is now stored ready
for use, that is, it is potential energy.
Upon releasing the hammer,
the potential energy becomes kinetic energy---the force of gravity
pulls the hammer downwards through the same distance the hammer
was originally raised upwards, so since it's a force of the same
size as the original lifting force, the work done on the hammer
by gravity in giving it motion is the same as the work done previously
in lifting it, so as it hits the nail it has a kinetic energy
of 100 joules. We say that the potential energy is transformed
into kinetic energy, which is then spent driving in the nail.
We should emphasize that both energy and work are measured in the same units, joules. In the example above, doing work by lifting just adds energy to a body, so-called potential energy, equal to the amount of work done.
A compressed spring is just another way of storing energy. It takes work to compress a spring, but (apart from small frictional effects) all that work is released as the spring uncoils or springs back. The stored energy in the compressed spring is often called elastic potential energy, as opposed to the gravitational potential energy of the raised weight.
Kinetic energy is created when a force does work accelerating a mass and increases its speed. Just as for potential energy, we can find the kinetic energy created by figuring out how much work the force does in speeding up the body.
Remember that a force only does work if the body the force is acting on moves in the direction of the force. For example, for a satellite going in a circular orbit around the earth, the force of gravity is constantly accelerating the body downwards, but it never gets any closer to sea level, it just swings around. Thus the body does not actually move any distance in the direction gravity's pulling it, and in this case gravity does no work on the body.
Consider, in contrast, the work the force of gravity does on a
stone that is simply dropped from a cliff. Let's be specific and
suppose it's a one kilogram stone, so the force of gravity is
ten newtons downwards. In one second, the stone will be moving
at ten meters per second, and will have dropped five meters. Remember the forula d = ½at2
The work done at this point by gravity is force x distance = 10 newtons
x 5 meters = 50 joules, so this is the kinetic energy of a one
kilogram mass going at 10 meters per second.
How does the kinetic energy increase with speed? Think about the situation after 2
seconds. The mass has now increased in speed to twenty meters
per second. It has fallen a total distance of twenty meters (average
speed 10 meters per second x time elapsed of 2 seconds). So the
work done by the force of gravity in accelerating the mass over
the first two seconds is force x distance = 10 newtons x 20 meters
= 200 joules.
So we find that the kinetic energy of a one kilogram mass moving
at 10 meters per second is 50 joules, moving at 20 meters per
second it's 200 joules. It's not difficult to check that after
three seconds, when the mass is moving at 30 meters per second,
the kinetic energy is 450 joules.
The essential point is that the speed increases linearly with time, but the work done by the constant gravitational force depends on how far the stone has
dropped, and that goes as the square of the time. Therefore, the
kinetic energy of the falling stone depends on the square of the
time, and that's the same as depending on the square of the velocity.
For stones of different masses, the kinetic energy at the same
speed will be proportional to the mass (since weight is proportional
to mass, and the work done by gravity is proportional to the weight),
so using the figures we worked out above for a one kilogram mass,
we can conclude that for a mass of m kilograms moving at
a speed v the kinetic energy must be:
Exercises for the reader: both momentum and kinetic energy are in some sense measures of the amount of motion of a body. How do they differ?
Can a body change in momentum without changing in kinetic energy?
Can a body change in kinetic energy without changing in momentum?
Suppose two lumps of clay of equal mass traveling in opposite directions at the same speed collide head-on and stick to each other. Is momentum conserved? Is kinetic energy conserved?
As a stone drops off a cliff, both its potential energy and its kinetic energy continuously change. How are these changes related to each other?