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How to Calculate Elastic Collision

What is Elastic Collision?

Elastic collisions conserve both momentum and kinetic energy. Objects bounce without deforming, maintaining the system's total mechanical energy.

Step-by-Step Guide

  1. 1Enter masses and velocities of two colliding objects
  2. 2The calculator applies conservation of momentum and energy
  3. 3Results show final velocities after collision

Worked Examples

Input
m₁ = 1 kg, v₁ = 5 m/s, m₂ = 1 kg, v₂ = 0 m/s
Result
v₁_final = 0, v₂_final = 5 m/s
Complete velocity exchange (equal mass)

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • Forgetting to conserve both momentum and energy
  • Using energy conservation alone (which also applies to inelastic collisions)

Frequently Asked Questions

Are elastic collisions common?

Perfectly elastic collisions are rare; they approach reality in hard material interactions like billiard balls or atomic particles.

What if masses are very different?

Heavy objects barely slow down hitting light ones; light objects bounce back at nearly double the impact speed.

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