What is Collision: Definition and 1000 Discussions

In physics, a collision is any event in which two or more bodies exert forces on each other in a relatively short time. Although the most common use of the word collision refers to incidents in which two or more objects collide with great force, the scientific use of the term implies nothing about the magnitude of the force.
Some examples of physical interactions that scientists would consider collisions are the following:

When an insect lands on a plant's leaf, its legs are said to collide with the leaf.
When a cat strides across a lawn, each contact that its paws make with the ground is considered a collision, as well as each brush of its fur against a blade of grass.
When a boxer throws a punch, their fist is said to collide with the opponent's body.
When an astronomical object merges with a black hole, they are considered to collide.Some colloquial uses of the word collision are the following:

A traffic collision involves at least one automobile.
A mid-air collision occurs between airplanes.
A ship collision accurately involves at least two moving maritime vessels hitting each other; the related term, allision, describes when a moving ship strikes a stationary object (often, but not always, another ship).
In physics, collisions can be classified by the change in the total kinetic energy of the system before and after the collision:

If most or all of the total kinetic energy is lost (dissipated as heat, sound, etc. or absorbed by the objects themselves), the collision is said to be inelastic; such collisions involve objects coming to a full stop. An example of such a collision is a car crash, as cars crumple inward when crashing, rather than bouncing off of each other. This is by design, for the safety of the occupants and bystanders should a crash occur - the frame of the car absorbs the energy of the crash instead.
If most of the kinetic energy is conserved (i.e. the objects continue moving afterwards), the collision is said to be elastic. An example of this is a baseball bat hitting a baseball - the kinetic energy of the bat is transferred to the ball, greatly increasing the ball's velocity. The sound of the bat hitting the ball represents the loss of energy.
And if all of the total kinetic energy is conserved (i.e. no energy is released as sound, heat, etc.), the collision is said to be perfectly elastic. Such a system is an idealization and cannot occur in reality, due to the second law of thermodynamics.

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  1. S

    Speed of object after collision related to spring

    Homework Statement As shown in the figure below, object A (mass: m) is at rest on a smooth, horizontal surface, and a lightweight spring that compress / stretches in the horizontal direction is attached to it. Object B, which has the same mass m, approaches A from the left side with speed v and...
  2. terryds

    Collision Problem: Determining Mass of Ball

    Homework Statement Two titanium balls approaches each other with same speed and then collides elastically. After the colision, one of the ball which mass is 300 g becomes motionless. Determine the mass of another ball Homework Equations Conservation of momentum and energy The Attempt at a...
  3. J

    B Collision of identical fermions

    What happens if I shoot a fermion at another identical fermion at rest? For example, do the fermions stick together, or do they bounce? Let's ignore gravity, electro-magnetism, weak force and strong force. Edit: We are considering the Pauli exclusion principle.
  4. A

    Car collision: decomposing momentum in x- and y-direction

    Homework Statement Two cars collide at an intersection. Car A, with mass 2000 kg, is going from west to east, while car B, with mass 1500 kg, is going from north to south at 15 m/s. As a result of this collision, the two cars become enmeshed and move as one afterward. In your role as an expert...
  5. E

    Two sphere collision -- What's the speed?

    Homework Statement Two solid spheres hung by thin threads from a horizontal support (Figure 1) are initially in contact with each other. Sphere 1 has inertia m1 = 0.040 kg , and sphere 2 has inertia m2 = 0.10 kg. When pulled to the left and released, sphere 1 collides elastically with sphere 2...
  6. E

    How Do You Determine the Inertia of Cart A?

    Homework Statement A 1-kg standard cart collides with a cart A of unknown inertia. Both carts appear to be rolling with significant wheel friction because their velocities change with time as shown graph below: What is the inertia of cart A? Homework Equations i am unsure how to even solve for...
  7. E

    Inelastic collision: final velocity after collision

    Homework Statement You are driving your 1000-kg car at a velocity of(19 m/s )ι^ when a 9.0-g bug splatters on your windshield. Before the collision, the bug was traveling at a velocity of (-1.5 m/s )ι^. What is the change in velocity of the car due to its encounter with the bug?Homework...
  8. F

    Sign convention problem in momentum calulations

    Homework Statement Particle A has a mass of 1kg and velocity 2x10^8m/s to the right and collides with a stationary particle B that has a mass of 4kg. after the collision, particle A moves to the left with a velocity(v) and particle B moves to the right with a velocity of 1x10^7 m/s. calcuate...
  9. J

    I Limiting behavior of quantum elastic collision

    From the hyperphysics site http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/elacol2.html#c1 on classical elastic collisions I see that if an incoming particle of mass ##m_1## with velocity ##v_1## collides into a stationary target particle of mass ##m_2## then the velocity of the target particle after...
  10. D

    Length covered by block after collision

    Homework Statement Board ##A## is placed on board ##B## as shown. Both boards slide, without moving w.r.t each other, along a frictionless horizontal surface at a speed of ##6 \text{m/s}##. Board ##B## hits a resulting board ##C##, "head-on". After the collision, board ##B## and ##C## stick...
  11. ChrisBrandsborg

    Will the Tractor and Tesla Avoid a Collision on the Mountain Road?

    Homework Statement Problem 5: Collision course A huge tractor and a Tesla full of school children come driving along a winding mountain road, in opposite directions. The tractor has a speed of 40.0km/h and the car zooms along with 80.0 km/h. The Tesla suddenly comes around a corner, sees the...
  12. Author_X

    Backstory Help: Asteroid Collision in California

    I am currently working on the backstory to a story I'm writing as a means of world-building. However, I'm not quite as physics-literate as everyone else, so rather than winging it and coming off like an idiot, I came here. http://sta.sh/0126svntmin Exhibit A. The red marks the range of the...
  13. P

    Energy transfer in elastic collision.

    How do I derive the energy transfer equation in an elastic collision of two bodies of masses m and M respectively,using the energy and momentum conservation relations in the laboratory frame? $$\frac{1}{2} m_1 v_0^2 = \frac 1 2 m_1 v^2 + \frac 1 2 m_2 V^2$$ $$m_1 v \cos(\phi)=m_1 v_0 -m_2 V...
  14. A

    Two vehicles braking to avoid a collision

    A tractor and a Tesla drives in opposite directions. The tractor has a speed of 40.0km/h and the car has a speed of 80.0 km/h. The Tesla suddenly sees the tractor, and they both immediately start braking, both with constant accelerations of 5.00 m/s2 (opposite to their directions of motion)...
  15. C

    Time of collision of two lead spheres

    Homework Statement Two uniform lead spheres each have mass 5000kg and radius 47cm. They are released from rest with their centres 1m apart and move under their mutual gravitational attraction. Show that they will collide in less than 425s. Homework Equations By Gauss' Law, force on a sphere...
  16. Erenjaeger

    Momentum, collision of two cars problem

    Homework Statement A 3.0 kg cart moving to the right with a speed of 1.0 m/s has a head-on collision with a 5.0 kg cart that is initially moving to the left with a speed of 2.0 m/s. After the collision, the 3.0 kg cart is moving to the left with a speed of 1.0 m/s. What is the final velocity of...
  17. I

    Elastic Collision: Understanding the Role of Positive and Negative Signs

    Hi guys. There is a question that confusing me for a long time. If an elastic collision occur, do I need to consider the positive and negative sign?? According to my teacher, an object moves in the opposite direction we need to consider the sign. Is it works in this situation?
  18. UnterKo

    Can Gravity Make a Hoop Rise Off Its Support When Beads Slide Down?

    Hello, I've got a problem and I have no idea how to start. I'll be happy for any hint. Thanks Homework Statement Two beads each of mass m are at the top (Z) of a frictionless hoop of mass M and radius R which lies in the vertical plane. The hoop is supported by a frictionless vertical support...
  19. X

    Inelastic Collision: Kinetic Energy vs Momentum

    In an inelastic collision is the change in kinetic energy equal to the difference of final and initial momentum if one of the objects is initially at rest? For example: m1v = (m1+m2)Vf -----> 0 = (m1+m2)Vf - m1v1 1/2(m1+m2)Vf^2 - 1/2m1v^2 = (m1+m2)Vf - m1v1 Or totally wrong? Thanks!
  20. B

    I Helium Ion collision with diamond wafer

    If a Helium ion He+ collides with a diamond wafer surface, an insulator, does the Helium ion, at 25 deg C, will the ion lose it's charge by gaining an electron from the insulative surface or does the ion have an elastic collision with no net energy loss or gain?
  21. JWA

    Angular-Linear Momentum Collisions

    Hi there, A friend of mine is creating a physics engine in java (mostly as a challenge I believe). Today he asked me a question about the results of collisions between objects. For example, imagine that these 2 objects collide: The results of such a collusion would be something like this...
  22. A

    Solve for 2D Elastic Collision: Find θ & φ Angles

    Homework Statement A 2D elastic collision: Two pucks (masses m1 = 0.5 kg and m2 = 0.3 kg) collide on a frictionless air-hockey table. Puck 1 has an initial velocity of 4 m/s in the positive x direction and a final velocity of 2 m/s in an unknown direction, θ. Puck 2 is initially at rest. Find...
  23. A

    How to find the sound power in a collision?

    How would you go about calculating the sound power and sound pressure given the pressure (as in collisions [force/area]) of the collision, kinetic energy in the collision, velocities of both objects, densities and masses. Is this possible? Is the pressure of the collision equal to the sound...
  24. C

    A momentum question following collision

    I think this is a basic question, at least I would hope so. If two identical motorcycles are going at the same speed but one has a lighter individual. If each individually collides with a stationary object and the driver is ejected. Who will go further and why?
  25. H

    Collision and time to stop a block

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  26. R

    2 Cylinder elastic rotational collision

    Homework Statement [/B] A cylinder with mass 3kg slides on ice with its base surface at 5m/s and collides with an identical but stationary cylinder. The collision is elastic. After the collision, the center-masses of the cylinders move at angles 45 and 30 degrees from the starting direction...
  27. marsupial

    Calculate the impulse exerted after an inelastic collision

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  28. JayaSuria

    Inelastic Collision - Kinetic Energy

    A 6.0kg metal ball moving at 4.0m/s hits a 6.0kg clay ball at rest and sticks to it. The two move at 2.0m/s. a. calculate the kinetic energy of the metal ball before it hits the clay ball. b. calculate the kinetic energy of the metal ball after it hits the clay ball. c. calculate the kinetic...
  29. C

    Consider a collision: What's m1/m2?

    Homework Statement Consider a collision: If mass 1 has initial velocity 1i-1j of and mass 2 is initially at rest. After collision mass one moves with a velocity of 2i-3j and mass 2 moves with velocity of -1.5i+3j. What's m1/m2? Homework Equations m1/m2-=(v2f-v2i)/(v1i-v2f) The Attempt at a...
  30. P

    Special Relativity- Photon/Mirror Collision

    Homework Statement A photon of frequency ν is reflected without change of frequency from a mirror, with an angle of incidence θ. Calculate the momentum transferred to the mirror. Homework Equations E= hν Conservation of four-momentum The Attempt at a Solution If the mirror is in the x-y...
  31. bebop1

    Kinetic Energy and Collision Question

    Homework Statement Why is there more heat and sound energy produced with a larger collision? Homework EquationsThe Attempt at a Solution Honestly no clue. I would really appreciate any help! Any videos would also help!
  32. bebop1

    Kinetic Energy and Collision Question

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  33. StarWarsNerd

    Generalizing collision normal between two arbitrary shapes

    I am working on a physics engine, and I have a question about the collision normal. There are a lot of different ways people say to calculate this, perpendicular to the collision angle, perpendicular to the edge of body 'B', etc. I was wondering if it would be okay to assume the collision...
  34. KoaDcT

    Solving Elastic Collision: V1' = -2.5 m/s, 5.9 m/s

    Homework Statement The problem is pretty simple, however I don't understand which value to use after using quad formula to solve. See below. V1(initial) = 2.5 m/s V2(Initial) = -5.9 m/s A pool ball moving with a speed of 2.5 m/s makes an elastic head-on collision with an identical ball...
  35. StarWarsNerd

    Angle of Deflection in Elastic Collision

    This is the problem I am looking to solve: given two objects of different mass, find the angle of deflection after an elastic collision for each object. For both objects we know: m : Mass in Kilograms θi : Initial Angle in Degrees si : Initial Speed in Units per Second sf : Final Speed in...
  36. G

    A Two Black Holes' collision thought experiment

    Once, someone had asked two interesting (though absolutely hypothetical) questions: 1) What should happen during the collision of two BHs, one consisting of matter (BH+) and the other consisting of antimatter (BH-)? Should they form a larger BH or should they be annihilated? My personal...
  37. StarWarsNerd

    What is the correct collision formula in this scenario?

    I am working on a simple space game, and I am having trouble figuring out how to do collisions correctly; things bounce in the wrong direction or just get stuck together. Here are the things that are given: Direction of objects A + B in degrees Speed of objects A + B in meters per second Mass...
  38. newjerseyrunner

    Accuracy of a stellar collision event

    I'm in the process of writing a story and the first few thousand words take place near the head-on collision between a ten mile wide black hole and a really big star. I describe the star as big enough to swallow the sun and barely burp. I'd like the events to be as close to accurate as...
  39. terryds

    Amplitude of spring after collision

    Homework Statement A block with mass m which is on a slippery floor is attached to a spring with spring constant k. Another block which mass is also m approach and then hit the first block with velocity v as shown in the figure. After the collision, both blocks stick together and together...
  40. C

    What does physics say about Car collision damages?

    Thanks for looking into my thread. I find various threads suggest to use Kinetic energy/conservation of momentum to explain car collision. Moving car generate/carry more energy compared to stopped one. I find when a car (car1) (moves with 10-15 miles/hr) rear-ends stopped vehicle (car 2), the...
  41. R

    Conservation of linear & angular momentum head on collision

    Homework Statement Two cars collide head on but offset from each others center of gravity. After the impact the two cars are locked together as one body. Due to the location of the collision point, the impact causes the two locked cars to spin clockwise. Car A- traveling west going 10 mph...
  42. B

    Perfectly elastic collision problem with no given values

    Homework Statement A curling stone with initial speed vi1 collides head-on with a second, stationary stone of identical mass, m. Calculate the final speeds of the two curling stones. Homework Equations See attached picture The Attempt at a Solution I solved for vf1 as shown, but my answer...
  43. B

    Perfectly Elastic Collision and final velocity of ball

    Homework Statement Two balls collide in a perfectly elastic collision. Ball 1 has a mass of 3.5kg and is initially traveling at a velocity of 5.4m/s. It collides head-on with stationary ball 2 with mass 4.8kg. Determine the final velocity of ball 2. Given: m1=3.5kg vi1=5.4m/s m2=4.8kg...
  44. B

    Calculating Combined Mass of Archer & Bow w/ Conservation of Momentum

    Homework Statement After shooting a 28g arrow with an initial velocity of 92m/s[forward], an archer standing on a frictionless surface travels in the opposite direction at a speed of 0.039m/s. Calculate the combined mass of the archer and the bow. Given: **Subscript of 1 indicates values for...
  45. Inspiron

    Confusion about nature of collision

    I have a problem with understanding the nature of collisions and their outcomes. From my understanding, I come to think that when a mass collides with another, both of them should always have equal velocities post-collision. For example, when a mass moving at v1, m1, collides with a mass at...
  46. RoboNerd

    Question about conservation of linear momentum

    Homework Statement [pardon my crude drawing] Say I have a ball that hits the a rod at rest pivoted around hinge A. The ball in the diagram is the solid black, and the rod is the thin line in the diagram and is rotating around the square-shaped hinge at the bottom. I am not an artist but...
  47. R

    Calculate the final velocity of each cart after a collision

    Homework Statement Cart 1 has a mass of 1.5 kg and is moving on a track at 36.5 cm/s [E] toward cart 2. The mass of cart 2 is 5 kg, and it is moving toward cart 1 at 42.8 cm/s [W]. The carts collide. The collision is cushioned by a Hooke's law spring, making it an elastic head-on collision...
  48. fantisism

    Collision with an unknown mass and velocity after

    Homework Statement You slide a 2 kg block on a flat icy surface towards a static block of mass M. Before the collision, the 2 kg mass is moving at 3 m/s. The total kinetic energy is not changed by the collision. After the collision, the 2 kg mass is moving at −1 m/s i.e. opposite to its...
  49. fantisism

    Ice skaters collision with angle

    Homework Statement Two ice skaters crash into each other. Before they collide, one of them (50 kg) is skating in a straight line at 5 m/s, the other (40 kg) is skating at 4 m/s in a straight line at 90 degrees to the 50 kg skater’s direction. After the collision, the 50 kg skater is moving at 4...
  50. J

    A Computing the resistivity due to electron collision with 1BZ

    Hello there, Id like to estimate how the resistivity due to electron 'collision' with 1st Brillouin zone changes as a function of number of valence electrons in a metal. Say you start with Na, then add some other material with 2 valence electrons instead of 1, then the fermi wavevector will...
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