Here is a quick experiment… first, find a wall. Then hit it with your bare fist. (Take it easy, just hit it with enough force that you feel the impact.) Now put a pillow in front of the wall and hit it with about the same force as you hit it before. With the pillow in front of the wall, you can hit it a little harder if you like but again, don’t go nuts!
What did the pillow do? It slowed the time of impact. Remember our formula Ft = mv. When the momentum of your moving fist struck the wall directly, the momentum was cut to zero instantly and so you felt enough force to hurt a bit. When the pillow was in the way it took longer for your momentum to come to zero. So you could hit the pillow fairly hard without feeling much force. Basically a bike helmet is like a pillow for you head. It slows the time of impact, so when you fall off your bike, there is much less force on your head. Just be glad your mom doesn’t make you wear a pillow on your head!
So let’s go back to momentum for a minute. Momentum is inertia in motion. It is how much force it takes to get something to slow down or change direction. One more concept I’d like to give you this month, is conservation of momentum. This is basically momentum equals momentum or mathematically mv = mv. (Momentum is mass times velocity.) When objects collide, the momentum that both objects have after the collision, is equal to the amount of momentum the objects had before the collision. Let’s take a look at this with this experiment.
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