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Cross, Rod – Physics Teacher, 2022
What happens when a perfectly elastic ball collides with a completely inelastic ball? It is shown that the outcome depends on the stiffness of each ball. A standard textbook problem in mechanics is to calculate the outcome of a head-on collision between two balls using conservation of momentum and kinetic energy. It is easily shown that the…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Instruction, Mechanics (Physics), Science Experiments
Cross, Rod – Physics Education, 2022
A loop-the-loop experiment is described to show how sliding friction affects motion of the ball. Conservation of energy can be used to explain the basic physics, but significant energy loss is observed in practice and expands the usefulness of this apparatus as a teaching tool.
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Science Experiments, Scientific Concepts, Concept Formation
Cross, Rod – Physics Education, 2022
A loop-the-loop experiment usually involves a ball rolling around a vertical loop. A different version of the experiment is described where a nut was allowed to slide around a vertical loop. In both experiments there is a large decrease in kinetic energy when the ball or the nut first enters the loop.
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Science Experiments, Physics, Scientific Concepts
Cross, Rod – Physics Education, 2022
A collision of one object with two or more objects is relatively complicated in general, but a simple example is provided by Newton's cradle since all the objects are identical and in line. In the present paper, an experiment is described where a heavy mallet collides head-on with two billiard balls. The two conservation equations indicate that…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Physics, Science Experiments, Motion
Cross, Rod – Physics Education, 2021
The coefficient of restitution (COR) for a collision is usually a number between 0 and 1 depending on whether the collision is completely inelastic, or perfectly elastic or something in between. That is the usual situation for colliding spheres or a ball dropped on a horizontal surface. A different situation arises when a bat collides with a ball.…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Instruction, Teaching Methods, Energy
Cross, Rod – Physics Education, 2021
Experimental results are presented on the collision of a superball with two different wood blocks. The results are in reasonable agreement with a simple collision model where kinetic energy is conserved, but better agreement is obtained if a small loss of kinetic energy is assumed, as observed. The physics is slightly more complicated than the…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Physics, Science Experiments, Scientific Concepts
Cross, Rod; Gauld, Colin – Physics Education, 2021
Newton's cradle is a well-known physics toy that is commonly used by teachers to demonstrate conservation laws in mechanics. It can also be used to investigate the physics of colliding objects, by recording motion of the balls on video film. Various experiments are described using 3-ball and 5-ball cradles, showing how different types of collision…
Descriptors: Scientific Principles, Conservation (Concept), Mechanics (Physics), Demonstrations (Educational)
Cross, Rod; Lindsey, Crawford – Physics Teacher, 2018
An ice hockey player can strike a puck at speeds up to about 45 m/s (100 mph) using a technique known as the slap shot. There is nothing unusual about the speed, since golf balls, tennis balls, and baseballs can also be projected at that speed or even higher. The unusual part is that the player strikes the ice before striking the puck, causing the…
Descriptors: Athletics, Athletes, Physics, Science Experiments
Cross, Rod – Physics Education, 2017
When a hard object rolls on a soft surface, or vice versa, rolling friction arises from deformation of the soft object or the soft surface. The friction force can be described in terms of an offset in the normal reaction force or in terms of energy loss arising from the deformation. The origin of the friction force itself is not entirely clear. It…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Scientific Concepts, Physics, Motion
Cross, Rod – Physics Teacher, 2017
In a recent article in this journal, Shakur described an interesting problem where a bullet of mass "m" strikes a block of wood of mass "M" and projects the block upward. The same problem was considered earlier by Cowley et al. and others. The main question of interest is whether the block rises to a greater height if it is…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Scientific Concepts, Energy, Kinetics
Cross, Rod – Physics Teacher, 2012
The first recorded experiments describing the phenomena made popular by Newton's cradle appear to be those conducted by Edme Mariotte around 1670. He was quoted in Newton's "Principia," along with Wren, Wallis, and Huygens, as having conducted pioneering experiments on the collisions of pendulum balls. Each of these authors concluded that momentum…
Descriptors: Physics, Motion, Science Experiments, Conservation (Concept)
Cross, Rod – Physics Education, 2013
Measurements are presented on the rise of a spinning egg. It was found that the spin, the angular momentum and the kinetic energy all decrease as the egg rises, unlike the case of a ballerina who can increase her spin and kinetic energy by reducing her moment of inertia. The observed effects can be explained, in part, in terms of rolling friction…
Descriptors: Kinetics, Physics, Motion, Science Instruction