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Last update: 2022-10-05
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Physics A Level

Chapter 6: Momentum 6.1 The idea of momentum

Physics A Level

Chapter 6: Momentum 6.1 The idea of momentum

2022-10-05
125
Crash report

 Physics (9702)

Chapter 11: Practical circuits
Chapter 28: Quantum physics
Chapter 29: Nuclear physics
Chapter 30: Medical imaging
Chapter 31: Astronomy and cosmology
P2 Practical skills at A Level

Snooker players can perform some amazing moves on the table, without necessarily knowing Newton’s laws of motion – see Figure 6.2.

Figure 6.2: If you play snooker often enough, you will be able to predict how the balls will move on the
table. Alternatively, you can use the laws of physics to predict their motion

However, the laws of physics can help us to understand what happens when two snooker balls collide or when one bounces off the side cushion of the table.
Here are some examples of situations involving collisions:
- Two cars collide head-on.
- A fast-moving car runs into the back of a slower car in front.
- A footballer runs into an opponent.
- A hockey stick strikes a ball.
- A comet or an asteroid collides with a planet as it orbits the Sun.
- The atoms of the air collide constantly with each other, and with the walls of their surroundings.
- Electrons that form an electric current collide with the vibrating ions that make up a metal wire.
- Two distant galaxies collide over millions of years.
From these examples, we can see that collisions are happening all around us, all the time. They happen on the microscopic scale of atoms and electrons, they happen in our everyday world, and they also happen on the cosmic scale of our Universe.