A simple relation is developed between the elastic collisions of freely moving particles in one dimension and a corresponding billiard system. For two particles with masses m1 and m2 on the half-line x>0 that approach an elastic barrier at x=0, the corresponding billiard system is an infinite wedge. The collision history of the two particles can be easily inferred from the corresponding billiard trajectory. This connection explains the classic demonstrations of the “dime on the superball” and the “baseball on the basketball” that are a staple in elementary physics courses. It also is shown that three elastic particles on an infinite line and three particles on a finite ring correspond, respectively, to the motion of a billiard ball in an infinite wedge and on a triangular billiard table. It is shown how to determine the angles of these two sets in terms of the particle masses.

1.
D. Halliday, R. Resnick, and J. Walker, Fundamental of Physics, 5th ed., (Wiley, New York, 1997), Vol. 1.
2.
J. Walker, The Flying Circus of Physics (Wiley, New York, 1977), Example 2.18.
3.
G. Galperin and A. Zemlyakov, Mathematical Billiards (in Russian) (Nauka, Moscow, 1990).
4.
V. V. Kozlov and D. V. Treshshëv, Billiards: A Genetic Introduction to the Dynamics of Systems with Impacts (American Mathematical Society, Providence, RI, 1991).
5.
S. Tabachnikov, Billiards (Société Mathématique de France; American Mathematical Society, Providence, RI, 1995).
6.
E.
Gutkin
, “
Billiard in polygons: Survey of recent results
,”
J. Stat. Phys.
81
,
7
26
(
1996
).
7.
This problem was apparently first posed by Sinai. See, for example, Ya. Sinai, Introduction to Ergodic Theory (Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ, 1978).
8.
S. L.
Glashow
and
L.
Mittag
, “
Three rods on a ring and the triangular billiard
,”
J. Stat. Phys.
87
,
937
941
(
1996
).
9.
S. G.
Cox
and
G. J.
Ackland
, “
How efficiently do three pointlike particles sample phase space?
Phys. Rev. Lett.
84
,
2362
2365
(
2000
).
10.
J.
Rouet
,
F.
Blasco
, and
M. R.
Feix
, “
The one-dimensional Boltzmann gas: The ergodic hypothesis and the phase portrait of small systems
,”
J. Stat. Phys.
71
,
209
224
(
1993
).
11.
See, for example,
A.
Dhar
, “
Heat conduction in a one-dimensional gas of elastically colliding particles of unequal masses
,”
Phys. Rev. Lett.
86
,
3554
3557
(
2001
);
P. L.
Garrido
,
P. I.
Hurtado
, and
B.
Nadrowski
, “
Simple one-dimensional model of heat conduction which obeys Fourier’s law
,”
Phys. Rev. Lett.
86
,
5486
5489
(
2001
);
O.
Narayan
and
S.
Ramaswamy
, “
Anomalous heat conduction in one-dimensional momentum-conserving systems
,”
Phys. Rev. Lett.
89
,
200601
1
(
2002
).
For a recent review, see
S.
Lepri
,
R.
Livi
, and
A.
Politi
, “
Thermal conduction in classical low-dimensional lattices
,”
Phys. Rep.
377
,
1
80
(
2003
).
12.
For a general review, see
H. M.
Jaeger
,
S. R.
Nagel
, and
R. B.
Behringer
, “
Granular solids, liquids, and gases
,”
Rev. Mod. Phys.
68
,
1259
1273
(
1996
).
13.
S.
McNamara
and
W. R.
Young
, “
Inelastic collapse and clumping in a one-dimensional granular medium
,”
Phys. Fluids A
4
,
496
504
(
1992
);
I.
Goldhirsch
and
G.
Zanetti
, “
Clustering instability in dissipative gases
,”
Phys. Rev. Lett.
70
,
1619
1622
(
1993
);
S.
McNamara
and
W. R.
Young
, “
Dynamics of a freely evolving, two-dimensional granular medium
,”
Phys. Rev. E
53
,
5089
5100
(
1996
).
14.
A similar approach to that in the Appendix is given in
P.
Constantin
,
E.
Grossman
, and
M.
Mungan
, “
Inelastic collision of three particles on the line as a two-dimensional billiard
,”
Physica D
83
,
409
420
(
1995
);
see also,
T.
Zhou
and
L. P.
Kadanoff
, “
Inelastic collapse of three particles
,”
Phys. Rev. E
54
,
623
628
(
1996
).
15.
M.
Hasegawa
, “
Broken ergodic motion of two hard particles in a one-dimensional box
,”
Phys. Lett. A
242
,
19
24
(
1998
);
B.
Cipra
,
P.
Dini
,
S.
Kennedy
, and
A.
Kolan
, “
Stability of one-dimensional inelastic collision sequences of four balls
,”
Physica D
125
,
183
200
(
1999
).
16.
B.
Bernu
and
R.
Mazighi
, “
One-dimensional bounce of inelastically colliding marbles on a wall
,”
J. Phys. A
23
,
5745
5754
(
1990
).
17.
N. D.
Whelan
,
D. A.
Goodings
, and
J. K.
Cannizzo
, “
Two balls in one dimension with gravity
,”
Phys. Rev. A
42
,
742
754
(
1990
).
18.
D. W.
Jepsen
, “
Dynamics of simple many-body systems of hard rods
,”
J. Math. Phys.
6
,
405
413
(
1965
).
19.
T. J.
Murphy
, “
Dynamics of hard rods in one dimension
,”
J. Stat. Phys.
74
,
889
901
(
1994
).
20.
S. Redner, A Guide to First-Passage Processes (Cambridge University Press, New York, 2001).
This content is only available via PDF.
AAPT members receive access to the American Journal of Physics and The Physics Teacher as a member benefit. To learn more about this member benefit and becoming an AAPT member, visit the Joining AAPT page.