A boy jumps from a wall 3m high. What is an estimate of the change in momentum of the boy when he lands without rebounding?

A. 5 N/s
B. 50 N/s
C. 500 N/s
D. 5000 N/s

The answer is C, but why?

1 Answer
Dec 10, 2017

See explanation.

Explanation:

It is not possible to give the answer as an exact number if the boy's mass is not given.

The boy's end velocity can be calculated using the energy preservation law:

#E_k=E_p#

The equation comes from the fact that all boy's initial potential energy is transferred to kinetic energy.

#mgh=(mv^2)/2#

#v^2=2gh#

#v=sqrt(2gh)~~7,75#

So the change in momentum is:

#Deltap=7.75m#

where #m# is the boy's mass.

Looking at the answers we find that if the mass is about #64.5kg# then the answer would be #C#. Other answers require boy to be too heavy (#640kg# for answer #D#) or too light (#6.4 kg# for #B# or #0.64kg# for #A#).

The second part (referring to answers #A# and #B#) comes from the fact that new born kids usually weigh about #4# kg, so a kid weighing #6.4# kg is in an age he usually can't walk or jump.