A canoe in a still lake is floating North at #5 m/s#. An object with a mass of #50 kg# is thrown East at #1/4 m/s#. If the mass of the canoe is #300 kg # after the object is thrown, what is the new speed and direction of the canoe?
1 Answer
The canoe's final velocity has magnitude of 5.8335 m/s and direction of
Explanation:
The momentum will be conserved, meaning that initial momentum will be equal to the final momentum. Remember that momentum is a vector, so direction of the motion is important.
Let us define the unit vector
The initial momentum is
The final momentum is
As I said in the first paragraph, initial momentum will be equal to the final momentum. Therefore,
On the left side of that last equation, the canoe was moving straight North. On the right side of that, the 50 kg object had been thrown East. There was no Eastward motion in the initial condition.
If momentum is to be conserved, the canoe must head on a course slightly to the West of North to cancel out the Eastward momentum of the thrown object. The vector sum of the 2 pieces must be equal to the original momentum.
To analyse this, I suggest that we resolve the velocity
The component
Solving that for v_(f1W),
Now we need
So we must have
Solving for
So we have the 2 components of the canoe's velocity being
The magnitude of the canoe's velocity is
The direction of the canoe's course is
Sorry that this got so long. I hope that you can follow the approach. I suggest that you go thru each and every step ... and verify my math!
Steve