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Vitek1552 [10]
1 year ago
8

What happens in an inelastic?

Physics
1 answer:
Deffense [45]1 year ago
4 0

In an Inelastic Collision , the momentum of system is conserved .

In the question ,

it is asked about what happens in inelastic collision .

The Inelastic collision is defined as a collision in which there is a loss of kinetic energy. While the momentum of system is conserved in an inelastic collision, kinetic energy is not.

That's because some kinetic energy gets transferred to something else like ⇒ thermal energy, sound energy, or material deformation .

For Example : Let the two similar trolleys are traveling towards each other and if they collide,

but the trolleys are equipped with magnetic couplers they join together in the collision and behave like a one connected mass. This collision is perfectly inelastic .

Therefore , the details about Inelastic Collision is explained above .

The given question is incomplete , the complete question is

What happens in an inelastic collision ?

Learn more about Inelastic Collision here

brainly.com/question/14521843

#SPJ4

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This really calls for a blackboard and a hunk of chalk, but
I'm going to try and do without.

If you want to understand what's going on, then PLEASE
keep drawing visible as you go through this answer, either
on the paper or else on a separate screen.

The energy dissipated by the circuit is the energy delivered by
the battery.  We'd know what that is if we knew  I₁ .  Everything that
flows in this circuit has to go through  R₁ , so let's find  I₁  first.

-- R₃ and R₄ in series make 6Ω.
-- That 6Ω in parallel with R₂ makes 3Ω.
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--  I₁ is  10volts/10Ω  =  1 Ampere.

-- R1:  1 ampere through 7Ω ... V₁ = I₁ · R₁ = 7 volts .

-- The battery is 10 volts. 
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   So the other 3 volts appear across all the business at the bottom.

-- R₂:  3 volts across it = V₂. 
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-- R3 + R4:  6Ω in the series combination
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                     Current through it is I = V₂/R = 3volts/6Ω = 1/2 Ampere

--  Remember that the current is the same at every point in
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-- R₃:  1/2 Ampere through it = I₃ .
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-- R₄:  1/2 Ampere through it = I₄
           1/2 Ampere through 4Ω ... V₄ = I₄ · R₄ = 2 volts

Notice that  I₂  is 1/2 Amp, and (I₃ , I₄) is also 1/2 Amp.
So the sum of currents through the two horizontal branches is 1 Amp,
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Concerning energy, we could go through and calculate the energy
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The power supplied by the battery  = (voltage) · (current)

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They're not asking for that.  But if you did it and you actually got the same
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