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Momentum and Impulse

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What you learned

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Key takeaway

  1. Momentum combines mass, speed, and direction.
  2. Impulse is the signed area under the force-time graph.
  3. Equal impulse gives the same momentum change even when the force pulse has a different shape.
  4. A heavier cart can get the same momentum change with a smaller change in speed.

Common misconception

A bigger force automatically means a bigger final momentum change, even if the pulse is much shorter.

Momentum change depends on total impulse, which is the signed force-time area, not on force size alone. A large force over a short time can match a smaller force acting longer.

  1. Momentum

    Momentum combines mass with velocity, so direction matters as well as size.

  2. Impulse for a constant pulse

    For a constant force, impulse is the signed area under the force-time graph.

  3. Impulse-momentum theorem

    Impulse changes momentum directly, which is why the accumulated impulse and the momentum change should match.

Why it behaves this way

Explanation

Momentum measures motion with direction: in one dimension, . A heavier cart or a faster cart has more momentum, and reversing direction changes the sign of the momentum.

Impulse is the total effect of a force acting over time. In this module, one bounded force pulse acts on one cart, so you can compare the force graph, the accumulated impulse, and the momentum graph directly. The key idea is that the same signed force-time area produces the same change in momentum.

Key ideas

01Momentum depends on mass, speed, and direction, so the same speed change does not mean the same momentum change for every cart.
02Impulse is the signed area under the force-time graph. A taller, shorter pulse and a lower, longer pulse can produce the same impulse if their areas match.
03For the same cart, impulse changes momentum directly through , so the accumulated-impulse graph and the momentum change should match.

Worked examples

Solve the live pulse

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Frozen walkthrough

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Frozen walkthrough
Use the current pulse as evidence. First find the cart's momentum at the instant shown. Then use the same force and pulse duration to predict the impulse and final momentum, and compare that prediction with the graphs and the stage.

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Example 1 of 2
Frozen valuesFrozen at 0.00

At , what is the cart's momentum?

Time

0 s

Mass

1 kg

Cart velocity

0.5 m/s

1. Write the momentum relation

Use for the cart at the currently inspected moment.

2. Substitute the live values

.

3. Calculate the momentum

That gives .

Current momentum

Before the pulse starts, the cart keeps its initial velocity, so the current momentum still matches the starting value.

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