8.40 - Inelastic Collisions in One Dimension Puntos:40 The Moon's craters are remnants of meteorite collisions. Suppose
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8.40 - Inelastic Collisions in One Dimension Puntos:40 The Moon's craters are remnants of meteorite collisions. Suppose
8.40 - Inelastic Collisions in One Dimension Puntos:40 The Moon's craters are remnants of meteorite collisions. Suppose a fairly large asteroid that has a mass of 4.90x10¹2 kg (about a kilometer across) strikes the Moon at a speed of 12.8 km/s. At what speed does the Moon recoil after the perfectly inelastic collision (the mass of the Moon is 7.35×1022 kg)? Enviar Respuesta Tries 0/40 How much kinetic energy is lost in the collision? Such an event may have been observed by medieval English monks who reported observing red glow and subsequent haze about the Moon. Enviar Respuesta Tries 0/40 In October 2009 NASA crashed a rocket into the Moon, and analyzed the plume produced by the impact. (Significant amounts of water were detected.) Answer part (a) and (b) for this real-life experiment. The mass of the rocket was 2000 kg and its speed upon impact was 9000 km/h. At what speed did the Moon recoil? Enviar Respuesta Tries 0/40 How much kinetic energy is lost in the collision? (How does the plume produced alter these results?) Enviar Respuesta Tries 0/40
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