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8 September, 23:53

Cart 1 has an initial velocity and hits Cart 2 which is stationary. After a perfectly inelastic collision, the combined carts are traveling with exactly one third the initial velocity of Cart 1, and in the same direction. Which is correct about the mass of Cart 2

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  1. 9 September, 00:05
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    Let's use variables to illustrate the problem:

    Let

    m1=mass of cart 1

    m2=mass of cart 2

    v1 = velocity of cart 1 before collision

    v2 = velocity of cart 2 before collision

    v' = velocity of the carts after collision

    Using the conservation of momentum for perfectly inelastic collisions:

    m1v1 + m2v2 = (m1 + m2) v'

    v2 = 0 because it is stationary

    v' = 1/3*v1

    m1v1 = (m1+m2) (1/3) (v1)

    m1 = 1/3*m1 + 1/3*m2

    1/3*m2 = m1 - 1/3*m1

    1/3*m2 = 2/3*m1

    m2 = 2m1

    From here, we can say that the mass of cart 2 is twice that of the mass of cart 1.
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