8.01x - Lect 15 - Momentum, Conservation of Momentum, Center of Mass

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  • Опубликовано: 24 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 467

  • @roger72715
    @roger72715 5 лет назад +183

    Professor, after watching your content I have become more confident in exploring and decoding the subtleties of physics in everyday life. Regards from India.

  • @Jessica-hl4mo
    @Jessica-hl4mo 4 года назад +20

    thank you for letting me understand physics! it felt nearly impossible until I was directed to watch your videos by my professor at community college amidst covid-19.

  • @adityachavan175
    @adityachavan175 4 года назад +51

    I have fallen in love with physics now 💖💖💖, thanks sir. Truly a legend. Love from India

  • @namelesslamp12
    @namelesslamp12 5 лет назад +21

    Idk how but in one hour you present the concepts better than my teacher does in 2.5 h; u make physics look fun and interesting!

  • @beentherelovedit9150
    @beentherelovedit9150 4 года назад +8

    You clarified a confusion of mine which was almost 2 years old... I'm in tears prof...

  • @thienthanhtranoan6723
    @thienthanhtranoan6723 4 года назад +18

    I hope your channel can come to more people in my country
    A lot of students in my country don’t know how to learn physics correctly. Therefore they can not know the beauty of physics.
    Last 1 year, i hate physics and don’t know how to learn. But now you light up my light, my best teacher.
    I hope i can continue your job in order to make physics shine again in my country.

  • @pipa.bhatchaj
    @pipa.bhatchaj 4 года назад +6

    I am feeling like taking up a career in research in physics, instead of engineering now....after watching your wonderful lectures.
    Thank you Professor...

  • @OsamaRDawood
    @OsamaRDawood 3 года назад +4

    Dear Professor
    I really would like to thank you so much, your lectures and your way of teaching impressed me from the first time I saw your lectures a few years ago, and each time I see them again, I feel the same excitement as the first time when I saw them. So I hope to be like you someday.

  • @kianadresse891
    @kianadresse891 4 года назад +6

    I just wanted to thank you, you’re a big part of why I’m majoring in physics and you really inspire me sir

  • @martinmollerup2265
    @martinmollerup2265 4 года назад +81

    "Enjoy the presence of your parents" - See you on monday :-)

    • @randomfish9451
      @randomfish9451 3 года назад

      @Hunter Noe let me help u : wow it only took me 10 mins! it worked !

  • @KledAteTacos
    @KledAteTacos 10 месяцев назад

    many years later, and you still teach us all concepts of physics in a very easy and intuitive way. thank you professor

  • @muhammadahmadarshad5658
    @muhammadahmadarshad5658 5 лет назад +25

    Sir! you're such a great professor. I think you should live 300 years.

    • @girishsir2442
      @girishsir2442 4 года назад +1

      in which country sir is

    • @thienthanhtranoan6723
      @thienthanhtranoan6723 4 года назад +1

      @@girishsir2442 u can use google;

    • @turtle8558
      @turtle8558 3 года назад +1

      @@girishsir2442 bruh he teaches at mit, *masachustes* institution of technology, America

  • @K-riang
    @K-riang 3 года назад

    I'm currently an 11th grader, I find physics an interesting subject and wish to be a physicist but a majority of people from my area view physics only as a subject where they need good score to either become a doctor or an engineer, before watching this lecture, I was learning about classical mechanics from another teacher from my country, and to my shock all he did was show some mcqs on the screen and tell the answer without even explaining how he got them, all he said was"This is a very important question which will be definitely coming in your exams, learn it by heart, note it down or take a screenshot", like dude, are we only studying for the sake of exams? I got really frustrated and then remembered about Walter Lewin's lectures. I'm so glad to have remembered about it and very grateful for these amazing series of lectures.

  • @Logan753-g1v
    @Logan753-g1v 8 лет назад +60

    I wish I had a teacher like this.

    • @willnettles2051
      @willnettles2051 7 лет назад +15

      You do! We all do. Right here. What I really like is stoping the video, going back. I just wish RUclips gave finer controls. I usually spend quite a bit longer on the lectures. My wish is for a USB slot in my skull that I could just insert Angular Momentum. At the moment it's like swallowing an elephant. I've gone back to this lecture to try to sort it out. Maybe starting with the tail wasn't the best way...

    • @redkingizaya1206
      @redkingizaya1206 7 лет назад

      k

    • @ceilingfanenjoyer8572
      @ceilingfanenjoyer8572 4 года назад +2

      Pay 25000$ 😂

    • @gadirajujyothi6618
      @gadirajujyothi6618 4 года назад

      Me to

  • @hrperformance
    @hrperformance 5 лет назад +1

    How good is this guy!?? His talent, passion and attention to detail is something i will aspire to achieve. Thank you so much for sharing these lectures

  • @yashdesai8372
    @yashdesai8372 6 лет назад +2

    No one can ever explain any better than this. Wonderful lecture.

  • @ravipatimadhulika8850
    @ravipatimadhulika8850 3 года назад +5

    "Thank u sir for making the lecture so good"
    THERE IS SOME SPECIAL FEELIN YOUR LECTURES THAT MAKES PHYSICS LOOK MORE BEAUTIFUL. 😊😇😊
    "You made my day, because i was struggling to understand these topics"
    LOVE FROM INDIA🇮🇳

  • @francescocuccu4218
    @francescocuccu4218 3 года назад +1

    I love each one of your lessons, each one! It is way better than watching a Hollywood movie. Thank you

  • @fairysox221
    @fairysox221 9 лет назад +197

    I'll never be able to play Angry Birds again after watching this....

    • @vivekranjan8035
      @vivekranjan8035 2 года назад

      🙂🥲

    • @gilles466
      @gilles466 2 года назад +2

      lmaoo, just like how majoring in physics will stop you from enjoying action movies forever

  • @matjazmeza
    @matjazmeza 3 года назад

    Hi, I'm in the high school where we don't learn much, so I watch your lectures which they taught me that physics is even more wonderful than I taught. Thanks for sharing them for free! Best regards, not from India, but from Slovenia!

  • @Jk88_23DruT
    @Jk88_23DruT 9 месяцев назад +1

    Thanks Mr Walter lewin Sir You are a great teacher I am A jee Aspirant 🙏🏻thanks a lot sir.

  • @JoaoPedroPereiraAlves-e9t
    @JoaoPedroPereiraAlves-e9t Год назад +4

    I can just wonder if you and Professor Strang have any idea of how precious these recorded lectures are

  • @17blindrose
    @17blindrose 8 лет назад +2

    Sir, I am not only in love with Physics, i am also in love with your teaching style. Thanks a lot for inspiring us! God bless you!

  • @beentherelovedit9150
    @beentherelovedit9150 4 года назад +4

    Thank you, how can I ever thank you!!
    My jee exams are coming, and this topic was ghastly for me, as is for most students I believe. And honestly the first lecture series I watched from you. Thank you. I am crying.

  • @adityasalunkhe8156
    @adityasalunkhe8156 7 лет назад +21

    38:52 that derivation made my day, i am very satisfied i always use to wonder how people simulated motion of 3D objects , but now i know if i can parameterize the surface of 3D object i can simple calculate a higher integral and find the center of mass and translate that origin of the object with respect to only the force at center of mass of the object :)..very interesting.

  • @aradhyadwivedi4573
    @aradhyadwivedi4573 Год назад

    Regards from India, sir. I am a young 15 year old student and I loved your lecture . I now know why people apprectiate your love for physics !

  • @deustitties3589
    @deustitties3589 6 лет назад

    It would be a perfect world if teachers did one solid and always supported the theory they present with actual practical examples, just like professor Lewin. This is how you teach physics, you predict, you show, there you go!

  • @rohitchowdhury2462
    @rohitchowdhury2462 3 года назад +3

    Thankyyou MIT and professor Walter Lewin sir for providing these video lectures free of cost and thereby helping many physics enthusiasts.

  • @sankalpjha2117
    @sankalpjha2117 7 лет назад +2

    Its really gobsmacking that you are so equivocal about the contents and the way you teach ,that exhilaration in you is just amazing sir.Hats off!!!!
    Love from India!
    Will really love to meet you some day

  • @imempire69
    @imempire69 8 месяцев назад +1

    I always had something special feeling for physics, and Professor Walter Lewin sir, you have amplified it entirely, now I love physics and wanna persuit a career in it...
    Sir but I have been confused of its job market, please sir give me some advise❤

    • @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259
      @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259  8 месяцев назад +1

      I cannot advise you. I was made for Physics, thus I had no choice

    • @imempire69
      @imempire69 8 месяцев назад

      ​​@@lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259 please sir I need a Professional like you to give me an honest advise😢
      Shall I not go for it even I love it?
      Btw, thanks for your reply... Love from Bangladesh ❤❤

  • @Akshit-te7gx
    @Akshit-te7gx 3 года назад +6

    Thank you professor ❤
    Today i accidentally found your channel and it really helps me lot
    :)

  • @devkumar12
    @devkumar12 3 года назад

    No replacement of u sir as u are a unique professor in this universe 👏👏👏

  • @irfanmohd091
    @irfanmohd091 4 года назад +4

    Thank you for uploading this course on RUclips. Education must be free !

  • @Sunita.Kumari98
    @Sunita.Kumari98 3 года назад

    this is the best lecture i have ever watched on centre of mass . it is indeed amazing .

  • @thienthanhtranoan6723
    @thienthanhtranoan6723 4 года назад

    *Professor Walter Lewin, You make the world better!*

  • @HemantShivalkar
    @HemantShivalkar 3 года назад +8

    35:47 Centre of mass begins

  • @obayev
    @obayev 2 года назад

    Thank you. The knowledge about momentum and its conservation has turned out to be beautiful and profound for me!

  • @nazmeenbi9716
    @nazmeenbi9716 2 года назад

    Never new physics was this fun..l just fell in love with physics from lecture by you..love from Fiji❤

  • @ronitdahiya7523
    @ronitdahiya7523 3 года назад

    I start smiling after realising that
    World's best physics teacher is my friend 😊😊

  • @RadhaRamandwi
    @RadhaRamandwi 3 года назад +1

    Hi professor , I am in class 9th and I can understand what you had explained because of your way of explanation. Thanks a lot 😊. Love from India

  • @anushkagupta5397
    @anushkagupta5397 4 года назад +1

    Wow I just found this channel after I search on google best physics professor bcz my favourite subject is physics and it's really best lectures and best teaching way ❤️. Thanks walter lewin for this. Now I'm gonna watch whole videos. So much respect from india🙏.

    • @anushkagupta5397
      @anushkagupta5397 4 года назад +1

      Professor can you please give some tips for jee advanced aspirants ???

    • @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259
      @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259  4 года назад +3

      Watch all my 94 MIT course lectures. Start with 8.01, then 8.02, then 8.03. Do all the homework and take all my exams. *I guarantee you that you will then do very well on the Physics portion of any freshman college or JEE exam*

    • @anushkagupta5397
      @anushkagupta5397 4 года назад +1

      @@lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259 First of all thanks for replying 🙏
      Surely I will watch all lectures:))
      I hope I will meet you once in my lifetime:)))

    • @anujpandey4762
      @anujpandey4762 Год назад

      Thanku very much professor I hope it would help me for jee exam

  • @sayanmistry8222
    @sayanmistry8222 4 года назад +1

    I wish that one day I will teach my students like you , and show them the beauty of physics, thank you professor

  • @preetamsarkar2634
    @preetamsarkar2634 3 года назад

    Big fan professor from India. It helps me a lot cause I am also a jee aspirant. Be very happy in life.

  • @aanandmahato3104
    @aanandmahato3104 2 месяца назад +1

    Your experiment speaks more than your equation professor.
    From Nepal

  • @shreyanshagrahari7217
    @shreyanshagrahari7217 2 года назад +1

    Such a great explanation, hats off to you sir. Now I am trying to relate physics to this great world. I feel very thankful to you sir. 🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏

  • @douglasbechler
    @douglasbechler 6 лет назад +3

    Dear Walter, Thank you for these video lectures. I don't understand the math ( mostly at all ) but I feel I'm learning. This Is the Power of Walter Lewin... :)

  • @jessicaquemado1527
    @jessicaquemado1527 5 лет назад +1

    Omg, 25000 dollars of tuition and Im watching it for free, thankyou so much Sir Lewin

    • @carultch
      @carultch 5 лет назад +1

      Your report card is ultimately what you are paying for, when you attend college.

  • @sarthakpatipati2847
    @sarthakpatipati2847 4 года назад

    I always feel refreshed after watching your lectures!

  • @deadshot4575
    @deadshot4575 3 года назад +1

    Thank you sir, without your lectures I wouldn't have taken more interest in physics. Now I aslo love physics.❤️

  • @johnrubensaragi4125
    @johnrubensaragi4125 5 лет назад +20

    34:37 Even the best of us made mistake

  • @neerajrattehalli9793
    @neerajrattehalli9793 6 лет назад +23

    2018, and 25K tuition sounds like a bargain **if I get in**

    • @turtle8558
      @turtle8558 3 года назад

      It's been 3years, did you get in??

  • @xavierpoes4985
    @xavierpoes4985 6 лет назад

    the example of the two cars bound together by a spring is AWESOME, because it shows a system that doesn't behave like a rigid solid, where the cm is not an actual point of the two cars. So let cm be a point that behaves so that M*r_cm=sum(m_i*r_i) where m_i are held together by bond forces, not necessarily rigid ones. Beautiful example!

    • @xavierpoes4985
      @xavierpoes4985 6 лет назад

      I should be able to like this lecture twice.

  • @thienthanhtranoan6723
    @thienthanhtranoan6723 4 года назад

    *8.01x Lecture 15*
    ----
    0:05 momentum
    4:30 conservation of momentum
    6:30 example 1
    11:00 about kinetic energy before & after
    (Real big deal in Physics)
    20:00 never confuse momentum vs kinetic energy
    23:10 hold m1&m2 by a compressed spring
    28:00 air track
    36:00 centre of mass
    41:20 find centre of mass
    46:13 motion of centre of mass
    50:00 tennis racket trajectory
    *see more here:*
    zyzx.haust.edu.cn/moocresource/data/20080421/U/01220/OcwWeb/Physics/8-01Physics-IFall1999/VideoLectures/detail/Video-Segment-Index-for-L-15.htm
    -----
    *We love the way you make Physics interesting!*

  • @manabranjanghosh4934
    @manabranjanghosh4934 4 года назад +1

    Well, I have not paid 25k ¡
    I can enjoy this video when ever I want.
    Love you Legend ❤️

  • @prajwalthakare7305
    @prajwalthakare7305 6 лет назад +2

    How beautifully you explained it.ありがとう WALTER せんせい

  • @thienthanhtranoan6723
    @thienthanhtranoan6723 4 года назад +1

    Thanks to our teacher, education is free

    • @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259
      @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259  4 года назад +1

      thank you for your very useful contributions

    • @thienthanhtranoan6723
      @thienthanhtranoan6723 4 года назад +1

      ​@@lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259
      Human’s life is limited but what they contribute to the world is eternal. Your lectures in Physics will change the world and eternal existence.
      Thank you so much.!

  • @navodayshikshaniketan905
    @navodayshikshaniketan905 4 года назад

    Sir I think ..............you are best teacher in universe ...I am in class10 but....I could able to understand it......thankss sir

  • @harikrishnajadhav8698
    @harikrishnajadhav8698 7 лет назад +2

    oh.. I really became the best follower of teachers after watching your video lectures.thanks sir🕴

  • @scienceandphilo
    @scienceandphilo 2 года назад

    Students pay 50000 dollars for this. And luckily we are watching it free. Great

  • @JagjitBrawler
    @JagjitBrawler 8 лет назад +5

    First of all, thank you for the awesome lecture on momentum, Dr. Lewin! I absolutely love your lectures and you really do make physics exciting (especially with your examples of momentum in both particles (tiny) and stars (humungous)) It really helps to know the application of momentum.
    I have a quick question: in the 1D example with the two objects going in the same direction, why does KE decrease again? It makes sense mathematically, but I don't get why that would be the case conceptually? Thanks again.

  • @राजेशकुमार-ढ8ख7ल

    Sir we really appreciate your technique of teaching physics it really makes me to love with physics

  • @ربيأهديهاالصراطالمستقيم

    I am very happy because i find this channel, thank you professor :) i in grade 11 from Arabic country.

  • @keybutnolock
    @keybutnolock 4 года назад

    The experiment at 46:23 CENTRE OF MASS may seem to defy
    'physical law' and the prof. BUT it's the irregular camera panning
    that gives this impression. The poor camera operator was
    distracted by the bonkers motion of the two cars. It may have
    been better to keep the camera still, and not zoom in so much.
    Physics works and I'm still amazed !

  • @burningsilicon149
    @burningsilicon149 6 лет назад

    An air hockey table is a good way to achieve minimal friction for moving objects and it can move the object in 2 dimensions.

  • @shashvat_fiitan7621
    @shashvat_fiitan7621 3 месяца назад +1

    Being a jee aspirant 😅 studying university physics cause physics is ❤

  • @ahmyjafri4680
    @ahmyjafri4680 7 лет назад

    two spheres A and B of masses M1 and M2 respectively collide.A is at any rest initially and B is moving with velocity V along x-axis after collision B has a velocity V/2 in a direction perpendicular to the original direction The Mass A moves after the collision in the direction
    A) theta = tan-¹ (1/2) to x-axis
    B) theta = tan-¹ (-1/2) to x-axis

    • @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259
      @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259  7 лет назад +1

      both are wrong!

    • @ahmyjafri4680
      @ahmyjafri4680 7 лет назад

      Lectures by Walter Lewin. They will make you ♥ Physics.
      Other two are C) same aa body B
      D) opposite to the B

    • @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259
      @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259  7 лет назад

      option E) tan(alpha)=M2/2M1 alpha is angle with x-axis

    • @ahmyjafri4680
      @ahmyjafri4680 7 лет назад

      Lectures by Walter Lewin. They will make you ♥ Physics.
      Sir i broken the momentum into x and y axis and took out the required velocity in x-direction and y separately. Then put tan theta = y/x. So the masses cancelled out. And further my y axis velocity came out negative. Am i wrong?

    • @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259
      @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259  7 лет назад

      masses cannot cancel out as M2 is not M1. I solved the problem for you which I rarely ever do. *tan(alpha)=M2/2M1* alpha is the angle with the x-axis. This is my last msg on this topic.

  • @rajatbansal512
    @rajatbansal512 8 лет назад +94

    Our generation's Feynman

    • @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259
      @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259  8 лет назад +26

      :)

    • @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259
      @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259  8 лет назад +34

      Thank you for yoour compliment!

    • @rajatbansal512
      @rajatbansal512 8 лет назад +7

      Lectures by Walter Lewin. They will make you ♥ Physics.​ You really help me wish my physics teacher was as good as you

    • @rajatbansal512
      @rajatbansal512 8 лет назад +6

      Lectures by Walter Lewin. They will make you ♥ Physics. Sir can you tell me which book to solve with this course it would be of great help. :)

    • @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259
      @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259  8 лет назад +32

      8.01
      Physics
      Hans C. Ohanian
      2nd edition
      W.W. Norton & Company
      ISBN 0-393-95748-9
      8.02
      Physics for Scientists & Engineers by Douglas C. Giancoli.
      Prentice Hall
      ISBN 0-13-021517-1
      8.03
      Vibrations and Waves by
      Anthony French
      CRC Press
      ISBN 9780748744473
      8.03
      Electromagnetic Vibrations, Waves and Radiation
      by Bekefi and Barrett.
      The MIT Press
      ISBN 0-262-52047-8

  • @surendrakverma555
    @surendrakverma555 2 года назад

    Excellent lecture on concept of momentum Sir. Thanks and Regards 🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏

  • @qamberabid9784
    @qamberabid9784 7 лет назад +1

    Two questions concerning the center of mass of the racquet you threw upwards:
    1) Wouldn't we take gravity as an external force on the badminton racquet?
    2) The center of mass of the racquet follows a smooth parabola and changes direction over the course of time. How is the velocity of the center of mass constant?

    • @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259
      @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259  7 лет назад +2

      1. yes gravity is action on the racquet
      2. The velocity of the center of mass is NOT constant. The component in the x direction is constant but not in the y direction.

    • @ricardo4fun922
      @ricardo4fun922 7 лет назад +1

      So technically Energy is not " destroyed ", but dispersed in a different form. I think the terms are really important in order to not create confusion.

  • @akritivishwas6574
    @akritivishwas6574 4 года назад

    Thanku professor So much.... Got more interested in physics because of you.. Respect and regards from India.. 😇😇

  • @solicitor7133
    @solicitor7133 2 года назад +2

    Sir what about *the Blackbird* which says it *doesn't follow conservation of momentum* (I saw a video on this on Veritasium)

  • @sonali-
    @sonali- 3 года назад

    I come here to see this lecture from physics wallah after watching lectures of physics from physics wallah....and this was fabulous lecture

  • @vishalmiri4370
    @vishalmiri4370 4 года назад +3

    It was such an amazing lecture. I really enjoyed ☺ it

  • @Guarrdian1984
    @Guarrdian1984 2 года назад

    Sir, I had a strong temptation to react on this lecture and so am I doing now - you forgot to mention imho a substantial thing and thus where the kinetic energy after the inelastic collison has gone!!! Of course, it decreases but which form it transforms into as the conversation of the total energy always holds!!!

  • @catsonair9432
    @catsonair9432 3 года назад

    Hi Professor. First of all thank you so much for allowing us to freely view your lectures, in a way your like the physics teacher I never had. I'm am currently learning about momentum and impulse and have a question that I'm getting conflicted answers to from my textbook, and various sources online. The problem the question stems from is a basic conservation of momentum problem, A gun fires a bullet that has a final velocity of V what is the velocity of the guns recoil is and the kinetic energy of both gun and bullet ( Which end up having different KE) . My book explains this by saying the force the gun exerts on the bullet acts over a shorter distance then the equal and opposite force of the bullet on the gun. But this makes no sense to me for equal and opposite contact forces only exists when two object push or pull on each other so how can this force pair act on the bullet for a different distance then the gun. Google explained it by saying that it was because of the mass difference not the distance. However this would still mean that the work done on each object is equal and opposite which isn't the case in the problem

  • @prat911k
    @prat911k 4 года назад

    Hello sir ,ur video lectures are very much beneficial for Indian IITJEE advanced exam...

  • @maheshwarsambari6178
    @maheshwarsambari6178 8 лет назад

    lecture 14,why bounce ball gives light:When you hold a ball above a surface, the ball has potential energy. Potential energy is the energy of position, and it depends on the mass of the ball and its height above the surface. The formula for gravitational potential energy is PE = mgh where m is the mass of the ball measured in kg, g is the gravitational acceleration constant of 9.8 m/se c2 , and h is the height of the ball in m. As the ball falls through the air, the potential energy changes to kinetic energy. Kinetic energy is energy of motion. The formula for kinetic energy is KE=1/2 mv 2 , where m is the mass in kg and v is the velocity in m/sec 2 . Both potential and kinetic energy have units of Joules (J).
    As the ball falls through the air, the Law of Conservation of Energy is in effect and states that energy is neither gained nor lost, only transferred from one form to another. The total energy of the system remains the same; the potential energy changes to kinetic energy, but no energy is lost. When the ball collides with the floor, the ball becomes deformed. If the ball is elastic in nature, the ball will quickly return to its original form and spring up from the floor. This is Newton's Third Law of Motion- for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction. The ball pushes on the floor and the floor pushes back on the ball, causing it to rebound.
    On a molecular level, the rubber is made from long chains of polymers. These polymers are tangled together and stretch upon impact. However, they only stretch for an instant before atomic interaction forces them back into their original, tangled shape and the ball shoots upward.
    You may be wondering why the ball does not bounce back to its original height. Does this invalidate the Law of Conservation of Energy? Where did that energy go? The energy that is not being used to cause motion is changed to heat energy or sound energy. After playing a game of tennis or racquetball, you will notice that the ball is warmer at the end of the game than at the beginning because some of the motion energy has been changed to heat energy. Because bouncy balls have tightly linked polymers, most of the energy is transferred back to motion so little is lost to heat or sound energy, and the ball bounces well. This is the way the Happy Ball behaves.
    The Sad Ball has different characteristics. When it is dropped from the same height onto the same surface, it does not bounce even though it has been given the same amount of potential energy as the Happy Ball. It does not bounce because it is made up of a different material. Unlike the Happy Ball which is made of Neoprene, or common rubber, the Sad Ball is made of Norbonene. On a molecular level, Norbonene is different from Neoprene because Norbonene's polymers are more loosely arranged and rub together more when the ball deforms. This additional movement results in motion being converted to heat energy; instead of the ball bouncing, it gets warm. There are several ways to make the Sad Ball happy. One way is to change the temperature of the ball. When the Happy Ball is cooled, its molecules are not as flexible, causing the ball to rebound a smaller distance. When the Sad Ball is cooled, the Norbonene polymer does not deform as much, so less energy is converted to heat energy and the ball bounces. If the Sad Ball is heated, the same process occurs and the ball bounces.
    Neoprene and Norbonene have many uses besides bouncy balls. Neoprene is commonly used for wire and cable jacketing, automotive gaskets, seals, hoses and tubes, power transmission belts, foamed wet suits, latex gloves and balloons, as waterproof membranes, and for asphalt modification. Neoprene is flexible in its uses because it resists degradation from the sun, ozone, and weather. It performs well when in contact with oil and chemicals and is useful over a wide temperature range. It also resists burning better than exclusive hydrocarbon rubbers and resists damage caused by flexing and twisting. Doping of the Neoprene polymer allows for more versatility and optimal performance. Norbonene rubber has impact absorption uses. It is used as a damping material in shock absorbers and for the protection of conveyor mechanisms. It is used as a padding material in items such as body armor, helmets, sports gloves and mitts, and in the soles of shoes. It is also widely used as an industrial packing material. Stereo speakers make use of Norbonene to minimize resonance and external vibration.
    Happy and Sad Balls behave differently in a variety of situations. They roll down a ramp at different speeds, they emit sound waves at different decibels, and they bounce different heights on different surfaces. They can be compressed dissimilar amounts when the same force is applied and they are different densities, so they sink in different solutions at variable rates.
    Allow students to play with the balls for a while and experiment with dropping and rolling the balls to allow them some time to compare and contrast the behavior of the balls and for creative ideas to occur. The time frame for completing the lab is approximately 90 minutes, although this can be modified by reducing the temperatures tested to three instead of five, or splitting the class into 5 groups where each group tests only one temperature and then places their results on a class data table. Achieving exact temperatures is unnecessary; near 00C and near 1000C are easy to get through the use of ice and by boiling water. Room temperature is near 200C.

  • @therandomperson9627
    @therandomperson9627 2 месяца назад +1

    In the first experiment with the two blocks and the spring, is the spring force an internal force because the spring is in the system. If this is true, then is the springs momentum not accounted for because it’s much smaller than the other values?

  • @sjgaming768
    @sjgaming768 4 года назад +1

    Namaste 🙏🙏 🙏 sir
    Remember in 1st lecture you stated that
    Scaling factor
    Using femur example
    Can you please explain me
    That how thickness of femur of an animal would increase by 1000 times
    When length of femur is increased by 10 times
    Or the size of animal is increased by 10 times

  • @lifelyrics5659
    @lifelyrics5659 4 года назад +4

    Hey there professor! I really loved your videos. However, can we really say energy is destroyed? I thought energy only can be transformed and transferred.

    • @dustinl2375
      @dustinl2375 4 года назад +3

      Life Lyrics you could say that mechanical energy is destroyed (since it’s not conserved), but you’re correct that it’s not really destroyed. Rather, it’s transformed into internal thermal energy and transferred to the surroundings as heat and sound waves.

    • @forestreee
      @forestreee 4 года назад

      @@dustinl2375 In the real world, this would be the case. However, here we are doing the calculations based on ideal conditions, and so there should be no energy loss. I can understand when the energies get cancelled out due to opposite direction, but getting cancelled in the same direction confuses me.

  • @sohankolhe9847
    @sohankolhe9847 4 года назад

    Professor Lewin, your lectures have given me a great insight into physics. At 11:12 you asked a question about kinetic energy of the masses. I had a question regarding the same. In the problem, you conserved the momentum of the system. That means that the net external force on the system is zero so the work done by the net force should also be zero and by work energy theorem, the kinetic energy should remain constant. So why did the kinetic energy decrease? Where did the energy go?

    • @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259
      @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259  4 года назад

      total mechanical energy is conserved. PE (spring) + KE of the 2 masses is conserved. Work Energy Theorem on each mass tells you the change in KE of each mass. Net force on the center of mass is zero all the time. Work energy theorem tells you that KE of center of mass never changed; it remains zero throughout.

    • @sohankolhe9847
      @sohankolhe9847 4 года назад

      @@lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259 Thank you professor.

  • @devashishnegi8977
    @devashishnegi8977 3 года назад

    another day went well! Thanks to you, Now physics is a full time fun

  • @Tusharpandasuperhero
    @Tusharpandasuperhero 8 лет назад +1

    Walter Lewin Sir ..you are awesome. .thank you...

    • @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259
      @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259  8 лет назад +1

      +Tushar panda Thank you

    • @Tusharpandasuperhero
      @Tusharpandasuperhero 8 лет назад +1

      Can't the students point out anything during the lecture...for example the calculation mistake at 34:34???

    • @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259
      @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259  8 лет назад +1

      +Tushar panda Of course the students are allowed to interrupt my lecture. In fact whenever I make a slip on the black board I WANT them to point it out as slips of the pen are difficult to deal with later (slips of the tongue are easy to correct). Yet, no one interrupted me when I made the mistake. However, when I later watched the video I noticed the mistake and I corrected it with some text.

  • @kennethrichards3143
    @kennethrichards3143 Год назад +1

    What would happen if you could amplify the mass inside of a particle inside of the overall mass that was being exhilarated from outside forces then would it be possible to exaggerated that particle beyond the original mass that it was a part of

  • @darrylwillard2419
    @darrylwillard2419 7 лет назад

    The kinetic energy changes into heat. The conservation of energy is not violated.

    • @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259
      @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259  7 лет назад +6

      Kinetic energy is not conserved in inelastic collisions. However, *the conservation of energy is NEVER violated* (no where in the Universe (we think).

  • @flossics8310
    @flossics8310 7 лет назад +1

    I have a question for you. This question looks at two things, relativity and the conservation of energy. Suppose there are only two objects in the universe, an asteroid and a rocket. The rocket is sitting ontop of the asteroid and they are both stationary relative to each other. Now imagine the rocket accelerates to 99% the speed of light relative to the asteroid (keeping in mind that would require energy to accelerate it). And now lets imagine the asteroid accelerates to 99% the speed of light also and the two objects are now again stationary relative to each other. My question is, now can the rocket once again accelerate to 99% the speed of light relative to the asteroid and can the two objects now repeat this process? If so, now imagine another inertial frame of reference is made, perhaps a planet in the distance, or a moon or even a speck of dust, how would that object view the velocities of the two objects?

    • @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259
      @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259  7 лет назад

      ask google or qoura

    • @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259
      @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259  7 лет назад +1

      Objects, like many faint galaxies in the Hubble Deep field were at a distance of about 13 billion light years from us when they emitted the light. Even though their speeds away from us were a sizable fraction of the speed of light, the light would still travel to us with the speed of light. Since then they have moved substantially due to the expansion of space. They are now 45 billion lyr away from us and their speed relative to us is much larger than the speed of light. The light from them still travels to us with the speed of light but due to redshift, the wavelength is now infinitely high. Thus we see NOTHING!

  • @fatehaligolani7751
    @fatehaligolani7751 4 года назад

    14:58 kinetic energy cannot be destroyed, Sir. Instead, it can transform from one form to another. -> Law of Conservation of Energy

    • @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259
      @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259  4 года назад +1

      energy can not be destroyed but KE can be destroyed. *Any decrease in KE is a reduction in KE after which it is gone.* You may not like the word "destroyed" - that a matter of semantics.

    • @rihaveinaiba8269
      @rihaveinaiba8269 4 года назад +1

      @@lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259 please sir let help me to understand it.. so when the colision occurs and all the KE was "destroyed" was it really destroyed or was it tranformed to potencial energy?
      and thank you really much for lectures, i want to study medicine and this really helps me to understand and love physics

    • @blzKrg
      @blzKrg 3 года назад +1

      @@rihaveinaiba8269 destroyed really means that the kinetic energy was transformed into potential energy as the bodies get deformed during collision and also some of it is lost to heat and sound and also friction converts a lot of K.E. to P.E.. Even in a perfectly elastic collision, though, K.E. isn't constant throughout, as the 2 bodies come closer and the collision starts, due to molecular deformation some K.E. is converted to P.E. but that P.E. again converts back to K.E. because the collision is perfectly elastic. And hence K.E. before and after the collision stays the same but changes during the collision to P.E. So, K.E. can be destroyed by dissipative forces like friction or can be converted to P.E.

  • @AnupamShaw
    @AnupamShaw 3 года назад +1

    5:15 Certainly, Physics surprises ones a lot!

  • @Vibhunomeshwar
    @Vibhunomeshwar Год назад

    Sir i am neet aspirant
    You lectures help a lot❤

  • @prafullakalita1378
    @prafullakalita1378 Год назад +1

    Sir,.if a body always get a force normally when thrown on a plane then why does it not move perpendicular to the plane ?

  • @irgski
    @irgski Год назад +1

    interesting that no one in the class questioned his math of 2x 0.193 = 0.396 (actually 0.386)
    Says something abt questioning authority…

  • @prafullakalita1378
    @prafullakalita1378 Год назад +3

    Sir, if a ball in projectile motion hit the ground and lost half of its kinetic energy . Will the momentum be conserved in x direction ( since there is no external force in x direction)

    • @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259
      @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259  Год назад +2

      if it hits the ground at an angle momentum in x-dir will not ne conserved

    • @prafullakalita1378
      @prafullakalita1378 Год назад +1

      Thank you sir, but why does not momentum conserved In that condition ?

    • @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259
      @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259  Год назад +1

      @@prafullakalita1378 momentum is then not conserved in the x-direction THINKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKK

    • @prafullakalita1378
      @prafullakalita1378 Год назад +1

      Humble hello hello hello Sir, horizontal velocity is same in projectile motion , now after collision force acts normal to the ground so total exernal force in x direction is zero so momentum in x direction should be conserved..

    • @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259
      @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259  Год назад +1

      @@prafullakalita1378 yes you are ritgh if no KE is lost momentum will be conserved in the x direction but not in the y-dir

  • @tevarswamibaskaran4812
    @tevarswamibaskaran4812 7 лет назад

    During teaching,
    teaching+ demonstration works good . sir, The demonstrations are have to chose your self or college gives suggestions about which demonstrations have to perform.
    Because every demonstrations gives the ability to digest what ever we are studying during lecture.
    Thank you sir..for your hard works for us.

  • @oldyoutubevideos7430
    @oldyoutubevideos7430 6 лет назад +1

    Thanks Prof. Lewin

  • @himangiagrawal7961
    @himangiagrawal7961 3 года назад

    What indian jee aspirants need .... Professors lectures

  • @mitulsheth9323
    @mitulsheth9323 3 года назад +2

    20:53 when u realize u have to submit 4 Philosophy assignments by tomorrow.... rip

  • @mamatihayat9138
    @mamatihayat9138 6 лет назад +1

    At 22:20, I think that the kinetic energy from the chemical reaction is equally distributed on both masses!!

  • @YTCORGI
    @YTCORGI 29 дней назад +1

    Sir can you please upload just a small lecture for mechanical fluid....not that high level but like for 11-12th class student..

    • @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259
      @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259  28 дней назад

      My videos are not for klass 11 but some can be understood by class 12 students

    • @YTCORGI
      @YTCORGI 28 дней назад

      @@lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259 OK Sir, by the way I am a student of class 11th and i can understand your lectures, your concepts, They are explained in very simple and fun way, thank you sir for such amazing content. ♥️

  • @michael73931
    @michael73931 7 лет назад +5

    At 37:00 I am lost, why do we multiply the position vector by mass?

  • @shwetasharma154
    @shwetasharma154 5 месяцев назад +1

    Walter sir...do u know about IISc(Indian institute of science),a institute better than Harvard,cornell,etc.
    Its people
    Homi bhaba-nuckear scientust who discovered scattering effect
    CV Raman-nobel prize
    Vikram sarabhai- founded isro

    • @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259
      @lecturesbywalterlewin.they9259  5 месяцев назад

      I have given lectures there. I have known Vikram very well; I had several times dinner with him. Do not underestimate Havard, 125 people who studied at Harvard or who taught there have won a Nobel Prize.