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Someone fires a 0.04 kg bullet at a block of wood that has a mass of 0.5 kg. (The block of wood is sitting on a frictionless surface, so it moves freely when the bullet hits it). The wood block is initially at rest. The bullet is traveling 300 m/s when it hits the wood block and sticks inside it. Now the bullet and the wood block move together as one object. How fast are they traveling?

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1 vote

Answer:

22.2 m/s

Step-by-step explanation:

We can solve the problem by using the law of conservation of momentum. In fact, the total momentum before and after the collision must be the same, so we can write:


m u + M U = (m+M)v

where:

m = 0.04 kg is the mass of the bullet

u = 300 m/s is the initial velocity of the bullet, before the collision

M = 0.5 kg is the mass of the block

U = 0 is the initial velocity of the block

v is the velocity of the bullet+block after the collision, as they stick together

Solving for v, we find:


v=(mu)/(m+M)=((0.04)(300))/(0.04+0.5)=22.2 m/s

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