The Allamistako
First Post
AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAARRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH!
"I think my brain hurts!"
-Alla
"I think my brain hurts!"

-Alla
The Allamistako said:AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAARRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH!
"I think my brain hurts!"
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-Alla
Blacksad said:
I haven't missed it, but it's inaccurate.
let say you go from 200m/s to 50m/s in 1s, it's effectivly a 150m/s*s acceleration, and you continue to go forward.
let say you go from 50m/s to -50m/s in 1s, it's effectivly a 100m/s*s acceleration, and you go backward.
the first acceleration is the worst to the human body. the link you gave say the opposite. also it use a wall as the innert object and not a car of similar mass in the example, so it tends to modify the results.
Blacksad said:
I haven't missed it, but it's inaccurate.
Bagpuss said:
m1*v1 + m2*v2 = m3*v3
but since the masses stick together, and the cars are the same mass
m1 = m2
m3 = 2*m1
m1*v1 + m1*v2 = 2*m1*v3
so, v3 = (v1 + v2)/2
But your example is inaccurate as well since if you subsitute your values in the equation (thanks Zerovoid) then
v3 = (200-50)/2
v3= +150/2
v3= +75 ms
So car 1 goes from 200 to 75 m/s a acceleration of 125m/s*s
and car 2 goes from -50 to +75 m/s also an acceleration of 125 m/s*s so it doesn't make what difference the speeds are assuming the cars are of equal mass.
Now if the car hits a brick wall and goes from 200 m/s to a dead stop in the same time (1 second) then the change then the deceleration is worse (200 m/s*s).
So either I've made a mistake or its better to hit an on comming vehicle than a brick wall. God its been so long since I've done physics.
is false, ie the greater the accelerartion, the worst for your body, that your car continue to go forward or not doesn't have anything to do with that.When you have a head-on collision with the slower car you will continue forward after impact; there will be some "give" in the collision. You'll decelerate to a gradual stop, which is certainly better than colliding against a massive wall with no give. On the other hand, when you collide with the high speed car the force of impact will be greater and you'll do worse than slowing down or coming to an abrupt stop — you'll be snapped into a sudden reverse direction with a "negative give."
Bagpuss said:So either I've made a mistake or its better to hit an on comming vehicle than a brick wall. God its been so long since I've done physics.
Castellan said:
Nope.
Try another example. Let's say two cars heading in opposite directions strike the same building, clearly an immovable object. For each of them, the building absorbs the energy of the collision and imparts no net force on the cars whatsoever. We can't deny that.
Ulrick said:What if both cars were made out of the stuff they make Nerf footballs?
Ulrick