Problem: After a completely inelastic collision, two objects of the same mass and initial speed stick together and move away at half their initial speed. Find the angle between their initial velocities.
Now as you guessed this is a problem in 2-dimensions (Note when I say 2 and 3 dimensions in this post I'm talking about Euclidean Spaces i.e:) $$\mathbb{R^2}$$ Now my question is more a question of finding the most efficient Mathematical "Technique" to solve this problem.
The way I see it there are two ways that I could solve this :
1. Solve in one dimension at a time
I could break up the two-dimensions and solve for the angles needed to produce the result (as momentum is conserved independently in each dimension, this wouldn't be that difficult to do in 2 dimensions), but it's not something I'm keen on doing. The reason being, the question could easily be extended to 3 dimensions, and then the process of solving for velocities and angles in each dimension becomes really tedious.
OR
2. Solve all at once using Linear Algebra
Now off the bat, Linear Algebra seemed to me to be the easiest way to represent and manipulate the vectors in 2-dimensions and I know that given questions like these in 3-dimensions (and higher dimensions), Linear Algebra really is the way to go, but I'm not sure how useful it is in this specific question.
Trying to solve this way, this is how far I've gone :
$$\Sigma{\vec{p}_i} = \Sigma{\vec{p}_f}$$ $$m_{a}\vec{v}_{a_{i}} + m_{b}\vec{v}_{b_{i}} = m_{a}\vec{v}_{a_{f}} + m_{b}\vec{v}_{b_{f}}$$ The masses cancel out, as both are equivalent, leaving us with just the velocity vectors. $$ \vec{v}_{a_{i}} + \vec{v}_{b_{i}} = \vec{v}_{a_{f}} + \vec{v}_{b_{f}} $$
Now incorporating linear algebra, to represent the initial velocities as column vectors
$$\begin{bmatrix} v_{x_{a}} \\ v_{y_{a}} \end{bmatrix} + \begin{bmatrix} v_{x_{b}} \\ v_{y_{b}} \end{bmatrix} = \vec{v}_{a_{f}} + \vec{v}_{b_{f}} $$ $$\begin{bmatrix} v_{x_{a}} + v_{x_{b}} \\ v_{y_{a}} + v_{y_{b}} \end{bmatrix} = \vec{v}_{a_{f}} + \vec{v}_{b_{f}} $$ But that is as far as I can get using Linear Algebra. Also note that the problem mentions speed, the magnitude of velocity of the masses, and I'm not sure how to incorporate that into the equation I've arrived at. Furthermore I'm not sure how I could get the angle between their initial velocities, in the current equation using Linear Algebra (Dot Product or Cross Product maybe?, but I don't see how I could do that given the equation I have).
- So is there a way to solve this problem using Linear Algebra? (There has to be, I just probably can't see it)
- Are there other easier, more efficient ways of solving this problem that you think would work?
If I have made any mistakes along the way or if you think there are gaps in my understanding of anything I've written, please inform me.