Momentum
Whenever something is moving, it has momentum! Join Bill Nye the Science Guy as we investigate how mass and velocity combine to transfer energy during spectacular physical collisions across our universe.
Feel The Force!
The momentum transfers to the garden gnome! The toy truck passes its moving energy directly into the gnome during the collision, causing the gnome to tip over while the individual marbles scatter in all directions!
It pushes against its own fuel! ROCKETS MOVE BECAUSE OF THE MOMENTUM OF THEIR FUEL. The forward momentum of the rocket body going one way always exactly equals the backward momentum of the hot gas blasting out the exhaust nozzle at high speed!
Put Your Instincts to the Test
Think about how moving weight behaves when things crash together. Pick an answer for each question, then see if your instincts were right.
How much it weighs and how fast it is moving! Momentum depends on how much things weigh and how fast they are moving. The heavier an object is, and the faster it travels, the more momentum it accumulates!
The basketball transfers its momentum, launching the tennis ball high into the air! When you drop them together, the basketball momentum is transferred directly to the tennis ball, which makes the tennis ball fly away really fast!
It has absolutely zero momentum! IF YOU ARE NOT MOVING THEN YOU DO NOT HAVE ANY MOMENTUM. Motion is an absolute requirement for momentum to exist!
Understanding the Science
Tap each card to uncover the fundamental mechanical laws that govern moving objects throughout our world.
Key Concepts
Momentum
Tap to learn moreThe physical property of a moving object that depends entirely on its total mass and current velocity.
Mass
Tap to learn moreThe total amount of physical matter contained inside an object, often observed as weight in everyday observations.
Velocity
Tap to learn moreThe speed of a moving object travelling in a highly specific, measurable direction through space.
Energy Transfer
Tap to learn moreThe mechanical process where moving energy shifts directly from one colliding object into another upon impact.
Inertia
Tap to learn moreThe natural tendency of an object to resist changes to its state of rest or continuous straight line motion.
Propulsion
Tap to learn moreDriving an object forward by rapidly expelling mass out the opposite direction, as demonstrated by rockets.
Billiards
Tap to learn moreA tabletop game demonstrating momentum conservation, where striking a cue ball transfers energy into stationary coloured balls.
Conservation
Tap to learn moreThe physics principle stating that the total momentum within a closed system remains unchanged before and after collisions.
Try It: The Momentum Collision Lab
Welcome to the impact testing arena!
The Mission: You must launch different projectiles down the test track to knock over the heavy wooden targets at the end. Press the massive round activation buttons to choose between launching a light ping pong ball, a medium baseball, or a heavy bowling ball. Observe exactly how the projectile behaves after impact based on its mass!
Apply Your Knowledge
Let us see if you can correctly identify how different mechanical scenarios transfer momentum.
Match the Concepts
Click a communication term to select it, then click the matching description to place it.
into a stationary object to move it quickly
equals the backwards momentum of expelled fuel
that has completely stopped moving through space
cue ball transfers momentum into stationary coloured balls
Real World Challenge
Bill Nye the Science Guy demonstrates that a heavy bowling ball easily knocks over wooden pins, while a light ping pong ball bounces off them harmlessly. If both balls travel at the exact same velocity, explain why the bowling ball has so much more power to transfer energy!
What Has Changed Since This Episode Aired
This episode originally aired in 1995. While the fundamental equations of momentum remain exactly the same, the technology engineers use to model and manage moving kinetic energy has undergone an absolute revolution!
Updated: Supercomputers now model collisions digitally before a physical car is ever constructed! Automotive engineers utilise highly advanced non linear dynamic software simulations to track how momentum transfers through every microscopic weld in a vehicle frame during an impact. These advanced computer iterations allow safety systems to be thoroughly optimised across thousands of virtual crashes!
Updated: We now rely on explosive airbags! While seat belts stop your body from flying forward, modern vehicles are now universally equipped with supplemental restraint systems called airbags. In a split second collision, a computer ignites a highly controlled chemical explosive, rapidly filling a nylon bag with nitrogen gas to create a soft cushion that perfectly absorbs your forward momentum!
Test Your Understanding
Answer these questions and get instant feedback. How many can you get right?
Results
Your score:
Reflection
Think about how heavy freight trains require a massive distance to completely stop travelling even when using maximum brakes. How does understanding momentum help transportation networks design safer railway crossings in our modern towns?
Episode Discussion
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