A recent paper1 in this journal describes an experimental demonstration of the conservation of total momentum before, during, and after an elastic collision between two bodies. The experiment also appears to show that total kinetic energy is conserved in the process, including during the collision. There is a danger that this may give rise to some misconception given that, in any collision that takes place over a finite time, some kinetic energy must transfer to potential energy—albeit temporarily in the case of an elastic collision. Indeed, when a collision is observed in the c.m. frame, all kinetic energy is lost momentarily. The sequence of simple experiments described below, which can be performed using standard equipment available in undergraduate laboratories, was developed so that undergraduate students could study a collision process in some detail. It was designed to enable students to gain insight into a range of important ideas in elementary analytical dynamics, including conservation of momentum, energy transfer in inelastic collisions, and coefficient of restitution. An extension of the experiment also gives insight into wave propagation in elastic media.

1.
Nattakit
Sawadthaisong
,
Ratchapak
Chitaree
, and
James P.
Barufaldi
Demonstration of momentum and kinetic energy during an entire collision
,”
Phys. Teach.
49
,
56
57
(
Jan. 2011
).
3.
www.vernier.com/probes/dfs-bta.html or store.pasco.com/pascostore/showdetl.cfm?&DID=9&Product_ID=1468&Detail=1.
4.

For details of the ComLab project, see e-prolab.com/comlab/.

5.
J. L.
Synge
and
B. L.
Griffith
,
Principles of Mechanics
, 3rd ed. (
Wiley
,
New York
,
1970
), pp.
210
213
.
6.
See, for example,
Michael
Mansfield
and
Colm
O'Sullivan
,
Understanding Physics
, 2nd ed. (
Wiley
,
Chichester
,
2011
), p.
169
.
7.

In the laboratory frame ΔEE0=m2m1+m2(1e2), where m1 and m2 are the masses of the moving and target particles, respectively. See Ref. 6.

8.
Stephen
Fahy
,
John
O'Riordan
,
Colm O'Sullivan and Patrick Twomey
, to be published.
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